First Nations Mental Wellness: Mobilizing Change through Partnership and Collaboration

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Abstract

A key priority of the mental health strategy for Canada is to establish a coordinated continuum of mental wellness (mental health and substance use) services for and by First Nations, which include traditional, cultural, and mainstream approaches. This paper describes developments critical to informing the strategy and helping to create foundations for systems change at all levels with positive impacts being created in First Nations communities across Canada. Key lessons include the need to create mutually cooperative and respectful working relationships that will foster collaborative partnerships with First Nations in order to effect change in communities, and the use of culture as a foundation to create lasting and meaningful change.

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Restoule, B. M., Hopkins, C., Robinson, J., & Wiebe, P. K. (2016). First Nations Mental Wellness: Mobilizing Change through Partnership and Collaboration. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, 34(4), 89–109. https://doi.org/10.7870/cjcmh-2015-014

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