Author : Moneca Sinclaire
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (133 download)
Book Synopsis Voices of Urban Aboriginal Peoples with Diabetes by : Moneca Sinclaire
Download or read book Voices of Urban Aboriginal Peoples with Diabetes written by Moneca Sinclaire and published by . This book was released on 2018 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This art based research study is situated within an Indigenous research methodology. The goal of the research was to first, document the voices of Urban Aboriginal people with Type 2 diabetes and secondly, to bring together these voices into an updated oral format using the medium of radio. Four principles that grounded this research were Indigenous research paradigm, drawing from Indigenous scholars, critiquing the Euro-Western biomedical worldview of health, and reciprocity. Using an Indigenous research paradigm meant situating who I am as a Nahayowak (Cree) woman who used prayer, medicines and talking with Elders to carry out the research. Second, I ensured the bulk of the reference sources were Indigenous writers. Third, the research was undertaken knowing that health is situated in a colonial Euro-Western biomedical worldview and if the health of Indigenous people is to improve I must assert Indigenous ways of doing research; and finally, any work I do must have a component of reciprocity where knowledge and pragmatic tools, podcast of radio documentary, must be given back to not only the academy but to students and Indigenous community members. Reciprocity must be seen as the 'gold standard' in any work that Indigenous scholars do when working to change the situation of Indigenous peoples. The theoretical underpinnings of this research are four aspects of self, visually represented in the Nahayowak Medicine Model by Ghostkeeper as the mind, body, emotions and spirit. I was motivated to do this research when I found out 50% of my relatives had diabetes and when the Canadian Diabetes Association in 2002, and again in 2015, stated there is still a stigma associated with diabetes that prevents Aboriginal people from disclosing their diabetes. For this study there were seven Indigenous people who agreed to participate because they also wanted to create a space for other Aboriginal people to be able to talk about diabetes without shame or guilt. They hope their story will allow others to share their diabetes story. The interviews became a radio documentary that ensured views were broadcasted about Indigenous people living with diabetes from an Indigenous perspective that was directed toward other Indigenous people.