Cultural Safety, Indigenous Patients and Physiotherapy
Cultural Safety, Indigenous Patients and Physiotherapy
This course includes
The instructors
Overview:
Cultural Safety, Indigenous Patients and Physiotherapy delivered as a joint effort between the Global Health and Pain Science Divisions by Amanda Fortin and Katherine Harman. We all treat members who identify as Indigenous but many physiotherapists do not consider this in their assessment and treatment plans. This online course will provide the tools towards your journey to create culturally safe physiotherapy sessions
Learning Objectives:
- Recognize information about Indigenous People’s culture, geography, historical events, and trauma that may contribute to current health conditions and social determinants of health
- Understand that Indigenous people access health care in all parts of Canada
- Consider other strategies for assessing pain in Indigenous clients
- Apply the FIRST Approach to a case study
Who Is This Course For?
This course is a relatively new and growing area of practice for physiotherapists. This course is for any physiotherapist or healthcare professional who sees patients postnatally.
About the Speakers:
Amanda Fortin
Amanda Fortin is a clinical physical therapist at an acute care hospital in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. She completed her B.P.E.S at Brandon University in Manitoba, followed by her M.P.T. at the University of Saskatchewan, graduating in 2015. Amanda spent time, as both a student and a mentor, at an inter-professional student-run clinic aimed at providing holistic care to some of Saskatoon’s most vulnerable. She currently chairs the Global Health Division’s Indigenous Health
Sub-Committee.
Katherine Harman
Katherine Harman is an Associate Professor with Dalhousie University’s School of Physiotherapy. After her B.Sc. (PT) at Univ. of Toronto, she completed an M.Sc. (Anatomy / Neuroscience) and a Ph.D. (Psychology / Neuroscience). She teaches about pain to M.Sc. (Physiotherapy) students and her research program currently focuses on the therapeutic relationship and patients experiencing pain. Find articles in Physiotherapy Canada, Physiotherapy Practice and the Pain Sciences Division newsletter. And more recently: Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, Physiotherapy Theory and Research, Journal of Sport Rehabilitation, Journal of Interprofessional Care
The instructors
Material included in this course
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Cultural Safety, Indigenous Patients and Physiotherapy
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Introduction
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Terminology and Demographics
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Colonization Timeline
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Recent Timeline
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The FIRST Approach
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Questions
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Feedback