Top Banner
ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian
21
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

ABORIGINAL HEALTH

Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian

Page 2: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Outline

Do you know and understand Canadian History? Colonization and its impacts

Nutrition Concerns in Aboriginal Communities Prenatal; infants; chronic disease; seniors

Where does traditional food fit? My top 5 tips for working with First

Nation clients, colleges and friends

Page 3: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Question #1

How many different Aboriginal settlements do we have in BC?

A) 24B) 59C) 109D) 122

Page 4: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Residential School Facts

All provinces and territories in Canada 130 residential schools in Canada Began in 1892-1970 (80 years and more) 150,000 Aboriginal students attended

schools 80,000 school survivor alive today

Page 5: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Residential School Experiences

Most experienced physical, sexual, mental, spiritual and emotional abuse by the hands of those who entrusted to educate, care and protect

No contact with family; so far away “Aggressive assimilation” “kill the Indian in the

child” “Civilize” savage Indians /Fix the “Indian problem” Stripped away identity, language and culture of

Aboriginal people Lost their language and culture; unable to talk to

parents

Page 6: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Residential School Consequences Intergenerational impacts Physical, sexual, emotional & substance

abuse in Aboriginal communities today is a direct result of residential schools

Abuse has been denied until very recently

Page 7: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Alert Bay Mission School

Page 8: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Health Disparities

Poorest minority in Canada; 50% average income Social support networks Education 48% high school; 37% post secondary

(58) Unemployment 22% vs. 7% Housing: overcrowding, water, sanitation, air,

water Personal health & coping tools Breastfeeding, food insecurity in children Chronic disease rates 3-4 times higher

Page 9: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Cultural Competency Course

http://www.culturalcompetency.c

a/

Page 10: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

What do I see in my community? Tooth decay; bottle feeding, childhood

obesity Ellyn Satter eating dynamic issues Chronic disease; diabetes; HTN; obesity Addiction; smoking and alcohol Domestic abuse; unhealthy relationships Parenting issues, attachment disorders Anxiety, depression

Page 11: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

How do I address these issues? Cooking classes Food security projects Pregnancy outreach programs Parenting groups Schools food programs Chronic disease groups; pain groups Grocery store tours; food demos One to one counseling Collaborate-getting invited

Page 12: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Traditional Food

Salmon, halibut, Turbot Spring, pink, chum, coho, sockey, steelhead Lincod, red snapper, black cod,

Herring, Roe on kelp (K’aaw) Crab, Scallops, Sea erchants (Stew) Clams (Razor, butter, cockles, horseshoe, goeyduck) Muscles, prawns, shrimp, barnacles Venison, Elk Seaweed (Sew), Kelp, Sea asparagus Berries (salmonberry, strawberry, salalberry, huckleberry, wild cranberry, cloudberry) Haida potato

Page 13: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Satter Hierarchy of Food Needs

Page 14: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Shelly’s top 5 tips

Relationships Drop your nutrition agenda Humor Be curious; don’t judge Listen & learn

Page 15: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Relationships are key

Page 16: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Drop your nutrition agenda

Page 17: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Have fun; be funny; laugh

Page 18: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Be curious; don’t judge

Page 19: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Get to know your community/culture

Page 20: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Words from our colleagues

Respectful curiosity Patience Respect and learning Multidisciplinary

approach Passion of youth and

elders Funding opportunities Listen, open, quiet Relationships

Page 21: ABORIGINAL HEALTH Shelly Crack, Registered Dietitian.

Resilience

"Only to the extent that we expose ourselves over and over to annihilation can that which is indestructible in us be found." --Pema Chodron