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Wiley InterScience

Australasian Psychiatry

Australasian Psychiatry

Volume 11 Issue s1, Pages S15 - S23

Published Online: 6 Oct 2003

2006 Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists



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Indigenous Populations
Healing traditions: culture, community and mental health promotion with Canadian Aboriginal peoples
Laurence Kirmayer , Cori Simpson and Margaret Cargo
Correspondence to Prof. Laurence J. Kirmayer, Culture & Mental Health Research Unit, Institute of Community & Family ­Psychiatry, 4333 Cote Ste Catherine Road, Montreal, Quebec H3T 1E4, Canada. Email: laurence.kirmayer@mcgill.ca

Laurence Kirmayer

James McGill Professor & Director, Division of Social & Transcultural Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, McGill ­University, Director, Culture & Mental Health Research Unit, ­Institute of Community & Family Psychiatry, Sir Mortimer B. Davis − Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Cori Simpson

Coordinator, Aboriginal Mental Health Research Team, Culture & Mental Health Research Unit, Institute of Community & Family Psychiatry, Sir Mortimer B. Davis − Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Margaret Cargo

Assistant Professor of Research, Département de médecine ­sociale et préventive, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada.

Copyright 2003 Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd
KEYWORDS
culture • First Nations • health promotion • Inuit • Metis • residential schools • trauma • youth

ABSTRACT

Objective:   To identify issues and concepts to guide the development of ­culturally appropriate mental health promotion strategies with Aboriginal populations and communities in Canada.

Methods:   We review recent literature examining the links between the history of colonialism and government interventions (including the residential school system, out-adoption, and centralised bureaucratic control) and the mental health of Canadian Aboriginal peoples.

Results:   There are high rates of social problems, demoralisation, depression, substance abuse, suicide and other mental health problems in many, though not all, Aboriginal communities. Although direct causal links are difficult to demonstrate with quantitative methods, there is clear and compelling evidence that the long history of cultural oppression and marginalisation has contributed to the high levels of mental health problems found in many communities. There is evidence that strengthening ethnocultural identity, community integration and political empowerment can contribute to improving mental health in this population.

Conclusions:   The social origins of mental health problems in Aboriginal communities demand social and political solutions. Research on variations in the prevalence of mental health disorders across communities may provide important information about community-level variables to supplement literature that focuses primarily on individual-level factors. Mental health promotion that emphasises youth and community empowerment is likely to have broad effects on mental health and wellbeing in Aboriginal communities.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1038-5282.2003.02010.x About DOI

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