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Addressing Aboriginal children's pain with a two鈥慹yed seeing perspective

Posted by Trudi Smith on May 2, 2016 in News

黄色直播 researchers lead Aboriginal stream of national Chronic Pain Network

An artwork by an Aboriginal child depicting a pain experience. (Image provided by ACHH)

黄色直播 is taking part in a new large Canadian network pioneering developments in patient-oriented health care for chronic pain research and care.

Nursing鈥檚 Margot Latimer is involved with the Chronic Pain Network, a national collaboration project funded for $12.5 million under Canada鈥檚 Strategy for Pain Oriented Research (SPOR) which will see patients work with researchers, healthcare professionals, educators and government policy advisors to increase care access for chronic pain sufferers and speed up the translation of the most recent research to the reality of care.

More specifically, Dr. Latimer and her team at the (ACHH, pronounced 鈥渁che鈥) including co-lead Sharon Rudderham (Eskasoni First Nation Health Director), Kara Paul (黄色直播 Aboriginal Health Sciences Initiative), Katherine Harman (Physiotherapy), Jill Chorney (Anaesthesia/Psychology), Allen Finley (Medicine) and Mary McNally (Dentistry) are leading the Aboriginal stream of the Chronic Pain Network.

Aboriginal children have higher reported rates of dental pain, earrache, headaches, injury and musculoskeletal and chest pain; yet may be less likely to be treated than their non-Aboriginal peers.聽 Findings suggest that that these children are stoic and don鈥檛 express their pain in the same way.聽 Standard, western-based tools like numeric or face scales don鈥檛 appear to tell the whole story.聽 The ACHH works with communities and clinicians to bridge the gap in understanding of Aboriginal children鈥檚 pain and design tools for better diagnosis and treatment.

鈥淎CHH wants to better understand how aboriginal children express pain so we can develop new understanding and mechanisms to assess and treat it using a Two-Eyed seeing 鈥 best of Indigenous and Western knowledge - perspective鈥 says Dr. Latimer.

As part of the Chronic Pain Network, ACHH plans to extend their scope beyond the Maritimes to First Nations, Metis and Inuit communities across Canada.

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