91快色

July 31, 2020

How I'm spending my summer: Making cross-cultural connections in health care

Social work undergrad Lisa L鈥橦irondelle collects narratives of Indigenous Peoples' experiences, during her Alberta Innovates research studentship
Lisa
Lisa

Fourth-year social work student Lisa L鈥橦irondelle is having a life-changing summer.

She鈥檚 working for Alberta Health Services (AHS) as an Indigenous hospital liaison, where she offers support and health information to health-care providers, Indigenous patients/clients and their relatives, and helps to mediate health-care processes for Indigenous Peoples.

She鈥檚 also participating in a , conducting patient-centred research aimed at improving the experience of Indigenous Peoples accessing the health-care system.

鈥淭he research is about giving voice to the experiences of Indigenous Peoples while accessing health care,鈥 explains L鈥橦irondelle, pictured above, who is Cree Metis, with family rooted in the Buffalo Lake Metis settlement.

Goal: Improve health-care experience for Indigenous Peoples

As she explains it, the main purpose of her project is to improve the overall health-care experience for Indigenous Peoples and their families. For example, find ways to improve health planning and translation, strengthen connections to spiritual and cultural advisers, and facilitate better communication between patients and the health-care system.

Mike Boyes, PhD, an adjunct associate professor with the Department of Psychology, and member of the O鈥橞rien Institute for Public Health at the Cumming School of Medicine, is L鈥橦irondelle鈥檚 supervisor. The two met during his course on Human Development and discussed the unique social work lens which considers individuals holistically, including their backgrounds and connections, and the ways in which these important elements shape a person鈥檚 identity and reality.

Mike Boyes

Mike Boyes

'Cross-cultural connector'

In Boyes' opinion, L'Hirondelle's social work background, combined with her current AHS knowledge, makes Lisa a natural candidate to do this type of research.

鈥淲hen I spoke to Lisa about the research she was planning on doing,鈥 Boyes says, 鈥渋t quickly came up that Lisa鈥檚 experience as a liaison, is very much like a cross-cultural connector for people entering into the mainstream health-care system, which puts Lisa in a perfect position to do this kind of research.鈥

L鈥橦irondelle鈥檚 research is collecting a series of narratives which she hopes will begin to identify strengths and weaknesses in the health-care system that Indigenous Peoples are experiencing and the impact on their health. However, before embarking on the project, she knew that she first needed to build an ethical space to engage Indigenous elders, individuals and families. A space that would better support cultural capacity-building.

It鈥檚 important to gather Indigenous perspectives appropriately. So there has been a lot of elder/knowledge keeper consultation about the right ways to do this type of research.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, she鈥檚 had to change the ways she gathers stories. Traditionally she would be meeting with people face-to-face, but she is now gathering experiences through Zoom meetings where, unfortunately, a piece of the personal connection gets lost.

鈥淎lthough we are working remotely, there is a still a chance to connect and bond over common grounds like adaptability,鈥 she says.  

Reconcile western and Indigenous methodologies

The project is exposing her to a whole new side of research. For example, she is learning how to parallel her research with her worldviews and attempting to reconcile western research methods with Indigenous methodologies. Accordingly, she鈥檚 trying to remain as self-aware as possible to everything she does.

鈥淎 huge learning outcome throughout my experience has been the level of self-awareness at which I need to operate,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 am listening to someone else鈥檚 story and it would be unnatural if another person鈥檚 experience had zero effect on me.

I listen with an open mind and open heart. However, I am also acutely aware of my feelings and triggers and my responsibility to avoid influence on participants.

For the remainder of the summer, L鈥橦irondelle, whose end goal is to work in program policy and development, will be listening carefully to what people have to say about their experiences in the health-care system from the perspective of whether they felt they were culturally safe and had cultural continuity.

The Alberta Innovates Summer Research Studentship provides an experiential learning opportunity for Alberta undergrads who have an interest in health-care research. In total, 450 students across the U91快色 campus were accepted into various summer research studentships. For more info on the Summer Research Studentship offered at the 91快色, visit .

ii鈥 taa鈥檖oh鈥檛o鈥檖, the 91快色鈥檚 Indigenous Strategy, is a commitment to deep evolutionary transformation by reimagining ways of knowing, doing, connecting and being. Walking parallel paths together, 鈥榠n a good way,鈥 U91快色 will move towards genuine reconciliation and Indigenization.