Indigenous Cultural Safety in Health Care Summit

September 23, 2024 - September 25, 2024


September

September 23-25, 2024

GUEST EXPERTS

BREAKOUT SESSIONS

LEARN & NETWORK

OPPORTUNITIES TO NETWORK

The Summit has reached maximum capacity at this time! Thank you to all that submitted interest in attending. Those that were accepted have received a confirmation email. The planning committee is also maintaining a waitlist in the event of cancellations.


About the Summit

Welcome to the Indigenous Cultural Safety in Health Care Summit!

The North Bay Indigenous Hub, Indigenous Primary Health Care Council and North Bay Regional Health Centre have partnered to host this national event. Join us September 23-25 for learning and collaboration at The Westin Harbour Castle, Toronto. This summit aims to promote cultural safety in healthcare practices and settings and is open to all healthcare providers. 

Location: The Westin Harbour Castle 1 Harbour Square, Toronto ON M5J 1A6

This Indigenous Cultural Safety in Health Care Summit purpose is to address critical issues related to cultural safety in healthcare settings for Indigenous communities. The summit brings together healthcare professionals, Indigenous leaders, policymakers, and community members to improve the quality of care and ensure culturally respectful and safe healthcare environments for Indigenous peoples.

At the end of this conference, participants will be able to:

        1. Understand Cultural Safety: To educate healthcare providers on the concept of cultural safety, highlighting its importance in providing equitable and respectful care to Indigenous people.
          • Provide equitable and respectful care to Indigenous people with an understanding of cultural safety.
        2. Identify Barriers: To identify systemic and individual barriers that Indigenous peoples face in accessing healthcare, including racism, discrimination and lack of culturally competent care.
          • Recognize systemic and personal biases, including racism and discrimination, which create barriers for Indigenous people seeking culturally competent care while accessing healthcare services.
        3. Share Best Practices: To showcase successful models and practices in Indigenous cultural safety from various settings.
          • Compare successful models and practices of Indigenous cultural safety from various settings, while advocating for the development of a model in their own healthcare environment.

The Indigenous Cultural Safety in Health Care Summit highlights the critical need for systemic changes in the healthcare system to provide culturally safe and respectful care for Indigenous peoples. The commitment to ongoing dialogue, education, and collaboration is essential to achieve meaningful and lasting change.

Thank you for your interest in the Indigenous Cultural Safety in Health Care Summit. Due to high interest and limited space, not all requests can be accommodated at this time.

Hotel Reservations

The Westin Harbour Castle

To book your stay, please call toll-free at 1-888-627-8559. When booking, mention that you are part of the "North Bay Regional Health Centre Meeting Sep2024" or use the group code ‘NBM’.

Alternatively, you can use the following link to book your reservation online: Book your group rate for North Bay Regional Health Centre Meeting Sep2024

Group Rate Reservation Deadline for Confirmed Attendees: To take advantage of the group rate, please reserve your room at The Westin Harbour Castle by Monday, September 2nd.

For any questions or assistance, please contact The Westin Harbour Castle directly.

Agenda

04:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom Lobby
6:00 p.m. to 09:00 p.m.
Location: Regatta
Please join us at the gala to learn about the history of traditional and contemporary Indigenous dances and the grandfather drum. The dancers will demonstrate their own styles in their beautiful regalia while the singers sing with the grandfather drum.  It is an opportunity to learn about the Indigenous culture and practices.

Out of respect to our Indigenous dancers, singers, and sacred items, we will not have a cash bar until the end of the demonstration.  At that time, we will have music, light refreshments and a great networking opportunity.


07:30 a.m. to 08:15 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
08:15 a.m. to 08:25 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
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Elder Dorothy Lowe

08:25 a.m. to 08:35 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
08:35 a.m. to 08:45 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
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Stan Wesley

08:45 a.m. to 10:00 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom

Learning Objectives:

1) Discuss with colleagues that the basis of racism in the health care system is rooted in Colonial violence.

2) Identify what the ayisiyiniw ("Indigenous") medical system is and how to uplift and elevate it as the original medical system of Turtle Island as an act of treaty recognition, allyship, and reconciliation.

3) Discuss how allies are integral to addressing and reversing medical racism and creating solutions meaningful to Indigenous Nations by providing concrete examples of interventions.


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Dr. James Makokis

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Anthony Johnson

10:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
TBD
10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Yonge

Learning Objectives:

1) Identify tastawiyiniwak and two-spirit people from a Nehiyô (Plains Cree) perspective.

2) Describe how colonial violence impacted the health and well being of two-spirit people including the over representation in suicide for two-spirit trans peoples.

3) Create safe ceremonial spaces through sharing about the creation of a two-spirit rites of passage ceremony.


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Dr. James Makokis

10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Wellington

Learning Objectives:

1) Understand that ontological difference are based on context.

2) Appreciate the diversity of First Nation peoples.

3) Begin to engage in reflexive practice.

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Dr. Noella Steinhauer

10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Marine

Learning Objectives:

1)  Recognize the importance of connection to land for Indigenous people.

2)  Identify the positive health outcomes of land based detox treatment.

3)  Discuss patient experiences with this treatment modality.


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Doug Davey

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Kyle Martin

10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Pier 2&3

Learning Objectives:

1) Recognize the resiliency of Indigenous people and consider these strengths in the design of treatment plans.

2) Identify strategies that will contribute to healing from intergenerational trauma from colonization.

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Norm Leech

10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Regatta

Learning Objectives:

1) Recognize the Impact of Traditional Anishinaabe Plant Medicine: Participants will gain insights into the significant success stories and the profound impact of various Anishinaabe plant medicines in managing, treating, and reversing chronic diseases, supported by big data evidence.

2) Identify Key Plant Species and Their Mechanisms of Action: Participants will learn about the most effective plant species used in traditional Anishinaabe medicine, their chemical mechanisms of action, and how these mechanisms directly influence disease pathophysiology.

3) Evaluate Safety and Efficacy: Participants will understand the extensive safety data curated over years of practice, emphasizing the safety and efficacy of traditional Anishinaabe plant medicines in clinical settings.

4) Navigate CPSO Guidelines on Alternative Care: Participants will become familiar with the CPSO guidelines regarding evidence-based medicine and alternative care, learning how to responsibly incorporate traditional Anishinaabe plant medicines into their practice by understanding the flexibility within the guidelines.

5) Develop Skills to Advocate for Traditional Medicine: Through workshops and anecdotal evidence, participants will be equipped with the knowledge and skills to advocate for the use of traditional Anishinaabe plant medicines within Indigenous communities, understanding their role in promoting culturally appropriate and effective healthcare solutions.

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Joseph Pitawanakwat

12:00 p.m. to 01:00 p.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
01:00 p.m. to 02:30 p.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom

Learning Objectives:

1) Describe how the colonized Western lifestyle can promote chronic diseases and cause serious disruptions in specific areas of the brain and body.

2) Identify how Indigenous contemplative practices can change and heal different key structures and functions of the brain and body.

3) Develop practices that can be incorporated into everyday life and in professional work.


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Dr. Michael Yellow Bird

02:30 p.m. to 03:00 p.m.
TBD
03:00 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Pier 2&3

Learning Objectives:

1) Recognize the Impact of Traditional Anishinaabe Plant Medicine: Participants will gain insights into the significant success stories and the profound impact of various Anishinaabe plant medicines in managing, treating, and reversing chronic diseases, supported by big data evidence.

2) Identify Key Plant Species and Their Mechanisms of Action: Participants will learn about the most effective plant species used in traditional Anishinaabe medicine, their chemical mechanisms of action, and how these mechanisms directly influence disease pathophysiology.

3) Evaluate Safety and Efficacy: Participants will understand the extensive safety data curated over years of practice, emphasizing the safety and efficacy of traditional Anishinaabe plant medicines in clinical settings.

4) Navigate CPSO Guidelines on Alternative Care: Participants will become familiar with the CPSO guidelines regarding evidence-based medicine and alternative care, learning how to responsibly incorporate traditional Anishinaabe plant medicines into their practice by understanding the flexibility within the guidelines.

5) Develop Skills to Advocate for Traditional Medicine: Through workshops and anecdotal evidence, participants will be equipped with the knowledge and skills to advocate for the use of traditional Anishinaabe plant medicines within Indigenous communities, understanding their role in promoting culturally appropriate and effective healthcare solutions.

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Joseph Pitawanakwat

03:00 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Yonge

Learning Objectives:

1) Identify the strategies used by the Northern Ontario Medical School to create conditions for health care students to reach a new level of understanding of culture and its relationship to health from a patient perspective. 

2) Adopt/adapt relevant strategies into own organization/systems/practice.

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Dr. Lorrilee McGregor

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Dr. Marion Maar

03:00 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Wellington

Learning Objectives:

1) Describe how data can inform system planning to do more than react to negative experiences but prevent them from happening by assessing patterns and trends within healthcare and acting proactively.  

2) Amplify the power of the individual's voice through the connection of experiences and producing patterns that can be analyzed and understood by healthcare institutions and those who can influence change within the system.  

3) Discuss with colleagues how two physicians created this platform to address systemic racism.

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Dakota Recollet

03:00 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Regatta

Learning Objectives:

1) Improve patient experiences through an increased understanding of the prevalence of systemic racism, the impact of personal biases and the power of active listening.

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Ted Nolan

03:00 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Marine

Learning Objectives:

1) Describe the Nehiya midwifery system, medicines, and ceremonial revitalization as it relates to the Kehewin Midwifery Birthing Project National Demonstration site.

2) Identify components of the community development work required to revitalize Nehiya birthing practices including education, Elder engagement, and political support.

3) Anticipate the facilitators and barriers to uplifting the Nehiya birthing system, and incorporate practical strategies to work with allies, and utilize the media to share and educate.

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Anthony Johnson

04:15 p.m. to 04:30 p.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
07:30 a.m. to 08:15 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
08:15 a.m. to 08:30 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
08:30 a.m. to 08:45 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
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Stan Wesley

08:45 a.m. to 10:00 a.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom

Learning Objectives:

1)  Discuss with colleagues the testimony of a residential school survivor.

2)  Identify how experiences in residential school impacted trust in care.

3)  Design practical strategies to build rapport with patients to optimize their care.

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Angela Ashishkeesh

10:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
TBD
10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Regatta

Learning Objectives:

1) Describe how colonization has impacted Indigenous people.

2) Transfer knowledge into practice to better support Indigenous patients.

3) Identify when and where to find additional supports for Indigenous patients.

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Ashley Morrison

10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Yonge

Learning Objectives:

1) Identify Anishinaabe food systems.

2) Identify Anishinaabe waterways.

3) Collaborate with Indigenous people, recognizing the importance of relationships, reciprocity, and responsibilities.

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Quinn Meawasige

10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Pier 2&3

Learning Objectives:

1) List traditional interventions.

2) Apply these interventions into own practice.

3) Discuss possible positive health outcomes that result from traditional wellness practices.

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Mandy Mack

10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Wellington

Learning Objectives:

1) Explain the impact of colonization as a social determinant of health and the ways in which it continues to influence healthcare outcomes.

2) Examine the concept of whiteness and its influence on health outcomes.

3) Review actions taken in the BC health system to consistently address and confront white supremacy and advance the rights and health of Indigenous Peoples.


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Jorden Hendry

10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Location: Marine

Learning Objectives:

1) Describe the importance and origins of traditional medicine.

2) Increase therapeutic rapport with indigenous patients through shared knowledge of how to make a salve using traditional medicines.


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Alyssa Paul

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Carol Twance

12:00 p.m. to 01:00 p.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
01:00 p.m. to 02:15 p.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom

Learning Objectives:

1) Define Substance Use Disorder.

2) Describe the Emergent Need for Treatment Substance Use Disorder.

3) Assess Different Treatment Options for Substance Use Disorder.

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Dr. Louisa Marion-Bellemare

02:15 p.m. to 02:45 p.m.
TBD
02:45 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Yonge

Learning Objectives:

1) Communicate the importance of providing culturally appropriate and respectful health care to Indigenous peoples.

2) Identify strategies to adopt a wholistic approach to helping patients with physical wellness.

3) Describe the benefits of using a wholistic approach.


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Kieran Peltier

02:45 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Regatta

Learning Objectives:

1) Create an understanding of the past and the trauma experienced by Indigenous people; recognizing the loss of tradition and lack of awareness of the true effects of colonization in the way that care is provided in the current medical system. 

2) Identify strategies to reintegrate those lost or unrecognized values, traditions and priorities as determinants of health, as well as ensuring a trauma informed approach to care in today's medical systems for Indigenous people.

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Monica Cote Macson

02:45 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Pier 2&3

Learning Objectives:

1) Recognize the importance of water in Indigenous culture, including how we think about it and how we treat it.

2) Identify practical advocacy strategies to protect and preserve water systems.


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Autumn Peltier

02:45 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Wellington

Learning Objectives:

1) Identify practical and concrete approaches to implement cultural safety into your practice. 

2) Reviewing health outcomes and impacts of culturally safe care.

3) Discuss with colleagues what it means to be a good ally.


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Dr. Bridget McDonald

02:45 p.m. to 04:15 p.m.
Location: Marine

Learning Objectives:

1) Champion the voice of lived experience and support the use of particpatory photography as a therapeutic communication strategy.

2) Identify the positive outcomes of the Photovoice groups facilitated by the North Bay Indigenous Hub.

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Sarah Goodreau

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Joanne Morrison

04:15 p.m. to 04:30 p.m.
Location: Frontenac Ballroom
Accreditation

This one-credit-per-hour Group Learning program meets the certification criteria of the College of Family Physicians of Canada and has been certified by the Continuing Education and Professional Development Office at NOSM University for up to 12.0 Mainpro+ credit(s).

This event is an Accredited Group Learning Activity (Section 1) as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, and approved by the Continuing Education and Professional Development Office at NOSM University. You may claim a maximum of 12.0 hour(s) (credits are automatically calculated).

Dr. Olasumbo Adelakun

Dr. Olasumbo Adelakun is an Adjunct Professor at St. Bonaventure University teaching Global Leadership, an independent consultant and author. She has served as an assistant editor for various academic books and book chapters. Having lived on three continents, her penchant for improving the life experiences of others is reflected in her work as an educator, commitment to studying challenging human conditions, and helping to create opportunities to provide a voice and hope for change.

Dr. Delores V. Mullings

Dr. Delores V. Mullings rests on the shoulders of her African ancestor who have paved the way enabling her to be the first among many firsts. She is the first Black person, and only Black woman and mother to be hired in the School of Social Work and appointed to a senior administrative position at Memorial University. Her scholarship explores, mothering and parenting using critical pedagogies, including, anti-Black racism, Africentric theory and critical race theory.

Janthima Arimare

Janthima Arimare graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in political science from Ramkhamhaeng University in Thailand. After receiving her P.R. in Canada, Janthima proactively signed up for ESL classes and was quickly introduced to the HIPPY Program by her friend from class. As a mother of one son, Janthima felt motivated to start her job search. Currently, Janthima is working at the Gardens at Qualicum Beach, a long-term care centre, as a housekeeper, while she is also participating in the Health Career Access Program.

Renée E. Mazinegiizhigo-kwe Bédard

Renée E. Mazinegiizhigo-kwe Bédard is of Anishinaabeg/Kanienʼkehá꞉ka/French Canadian ancestry and a member of Okikendawt Mnisiing (Dokis First Nation). She holds a Ph.D. from Trent University in Indigenous Studies. Currently, she is an Assistant Professor at Western University, Faculty of Education. Her research area of publication includes work related to Anishinaabeg mothering, maternal philosophy and cultural traditions.

Dr. Erin M. Sorrell

Dr. Erin M. Sorrell is an Assistant Research Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology and a member of the Center for Global Health Science and Security at Georgetown University.

Dr. Sorrell works with partners across the U.S. government, international organizations, and ministries around the world to identify elements required to support health systems strengthening and laboratory capacity building for disease detection, reporting, risk assessment, and response. She is also interested in operational and implementation research questions related to sustainable health systems strengthening, with an emphasis on the prevention, management, and control of infectious diseases in humanitarian situations, and particularly countries and regions affected by conflict.

Dr. Sorrell co-directs the Biohazardous Threat Agents & Emerging Infectious Diseases M.S. Program. Erin received her undergraduate degree in animal science from Cornell University and an M.Sc. and Ph.D. in animal science and molecular virology from the University of Maryland.

Dr. Zaje Harrell

Zaje A. T. Harrell, Ph.D. is a psychologist with a passion for integrating theory and praxis. She holds a joint doctorate in Psychology and Women’s Studies with expertise in mental health and community change. Dr. Harrell is the principal of Conscious Endeavor, LLC. Her work has spanned academic publications, public policy, and social change thought partnerships. She is a married mother of three residing in the greater Baltimore Maryland area. Her interests include writing and yoga.

Subhita Nair

Subhita Nair is a HIPPY Home Visitor from the Regina Immigrant Women's Centre.Subhita is a mother of children, holding a MBA degree in Finance while previously worked in Banking and Financial Services in India and Malaysia. Subhita currently volunteers at Greentech Resources in Regina and spends her free time knitting and crotcheting. As an avid lover of travelling, Subhita also speaks English, Hindi, Malayalam and Tamil.

Debbie Bell

Debbie Bell is the founding Executive Director of HIPPY Canada. Debbie’s Masters Degree in Adult Education is combined with more than 20 years of experience in the fields of adult education and community development in socially excluded communities throughout North America.

As the founding Director of Simon Fraser University’s Community Education program, Debbie concentrated her work on the development of innovative strategies to create access to education for low literacy communities.

She has continued this work as the President and Chief Executive Officer of Mothers Matter Centre, bringing the HIPPY program to more than 20 communities across the country in an effort to equip low-income and socially isolated parents to help their children succeed in school and life.

Dr. Andrea O'Reilly

Andrea O’Reilly, PhD, is full professor in the School of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies at York University, founder/editor-in-chief of the Journal of the Motherhood Initiative and publisher of Demeter Press. She is coeditor/editor of twenty plus books including Feminist Parenting: Perspectives from African and Beyond (2020), Mothers, Mothering, and COVID-19: Dispatches from a Pandemic (2021), Maternal Theory, The 2nd Edition (2021), and Monstrous Mothers; Troubling Tropes (2021).

She is editor of the Encyclopedia on Motherhood (2010) and co-editor of the Routledge Companion to Motherhood (2019). She is author of Toni Morrison and Motherhood: A Politics of the Heart (2004); Rocking the Cradle: Thoughts on Motherhood, Feminism, and the Possibility of Empowered Mothering (2006); and Matricentric Feminism: Theory, Activism, and Practice, The 2nd Edition (2021).

She is twice the recipient of York University’s “Professor of the Year Award” for teaching excellence and is the 2019 recipient of the Status of Women and Equity Award of Distinction from OCUFA (Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations).

Dr. Perlita R. Dicochea

Perlita R. Dicochea is a Communications/Events Associate for CCSRE and Program Coordinator for CCSRE's Mellon Arts Fellowship and Public Writing Fellowship. Previous to her position at CCSRE, she co-curated an exhibition on the life and times of Afro-mestiza healer, entrepreneur, and Mexican and Anglo-American era landowner Juana Briones at the Los Alto History Museum and taught Ethnic Studies at the high school and college levels.

Having earned her Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies at U.C. Berkeley with an affiliated discipline in Environmental Economics & Policy, she spent some time in academia as a professor in the fields of Ethnic Studies, Gender Studies, Border Studies, Chicanx/Latinx Studies, and Environmental Racism & Justice.

Dicochea's chapter in Mothers, Mothering, and COVID-19: Dispatches from a Pandemic (Demeter Press, 2021) is titled ""A Single-Parent Multigenerational Family Testimony: Living Under COVID-19 and Other Orders in Silicon Valley."" She is Chair of the Diversity Advisory Committee at Los Altos History Museum and a Commissioner for the Santa Clara County Historic Heritage Commission. Perlita is mother to a 14-year-old chihuahua and two children, ages 5 and 6. You can learn more and connect here.

Dr. Margo Hilbrecht

Dr. Margo Hilbrecht is the Executive Director at the Vanier Institute of the Family. A family scholar, Margo completed her PhD at the University of Waterloo. Her research has focused on parents’ time use, employment, gender, and quality of life. She has worked in the not-for-profit sector for organizations including the former Centre for Families, Work and Well-Being, the Canadian Index of Wellbeing, and Greo, which specializes in knowledge translation and exchange focused on reducing harm from gambling.

Michelle Elliot

Michelle Eliot is an award-winning journalist and the host of CBC British Columbia’s weekday call-in show, BC Today, where she engages in conversation with listeners on the day’s top stories and on issues important to British Columbians.

Stacy Pascal

Stacy Pascal is from the Lil'wat Nation of BC and participates as one of the Home Visitor's of The HIPPY and SMART Program at the Vancouver Aboriginal Friendship Centre Society .