Cycles of silence: First Nations women overcoming social and historical barriers in supportive cancer care
Psycho-Oncology2016Vol. 26(2), pp. 191–198
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2016 papers
Chad Hammond, Roanne Thomas, Wendy Gifford, Jennifer Poudrier, Ryan Hamilton, Carolyn Brooks, Tricia Morrison, Tracy Scott, Doris Warner
Abstract
Widespread silence around cancer reflects both the limited access First Nations people have to formal, supportive programs and services, as well as the creative ways they provide emotional, social, and financial support within their informal networks. Beyond the support of their communities, they also required institutional provision of care that is culturally safe, addressing the colonial impacts on cancer communication and the disproportionate burdens of disease in First Nations communities.
Related Papers
- → Photovoice: A Participatory Action Research Strategy Applied to Women's Health(1999)1,684 cited
- → Photovoice as Participatory Action Research Tool for Engaging People With Intellectual Disabilities in Research and Program Development(2008)155 cited
- → STUDENTS’ PERCEPTIONS OF BELONGING: A PHOTOVOICE PARTICIPATORY ACTION RESEARCH PROJECT(2018)12 cited
- → Involving Children in Creating a Healthy Environment in Low Socioeconomic Position (SEP) Neighborhoods in The Netherlands: A Participatory Action Research (PAR) Project(2021)6 cited
- → Designing Community Participatory Action Research: A Proposal for Using Photovoice Method to Center Indigenous Knowledge(2015)3 cited