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Aboriginal Health in Canada: Historical, Cultural, and Epidemiological Perspectives

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In light of numerous studies demonstrating the poor health status of Aboriginal peoples relative to the Canadian population in general, the authors examine the complex web of physiological, psychological, spiritual, historical, sociological, cultural, economic, and environmental factors that contribute to health and disease patterns among the Aboriginal peoples. An overview of Aboriginal peoples in Canada provides a general background for non-specialists. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.

334 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1995

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Profile Image for Grumpylibrarian.
135 reviews8 followers
August 1, 2009
This provides an excellent overview of Aboriginal health in Canada today and, more importantly for my research, into the distant past, even considering pre-contact First Nations health.

I particularly liked that the author's were unwilling to project politics onto their subject. They acknowledge that population estimates are so wildly disparate that it's impossible to settle on the significance of population decimation in previous centuries, they acknowledge disease existed prior to contact, but they also acknowledge that systemic subjugation created disease vectors previously unknown in North America's indigenous populations.

Profile Image for Kira.
1 review
June 20, 2008
Great book. I learned more about how natives were treated and about about the emergence of health care in Canada. This is a wonderful book if you are interested in Canadian History. I am a health care professional, so this book was fascinating to me as a way to be more culturally sensitive to aboriginal patients. I recommend this book highly, but I understand not everyone is as big of a nerd as I am, as lots of it was stats and sometimes could be considered 'dry' information. With that said though, it was a relatively easy read.
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