Module 11(Eryn's Version) Flashcards

1
Q

Segregation in medical care: separate Indian hospitals promised to ___ disease, maintain the perception that Canada was a benevolent __

A

contain, nation

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2
Q

Vanishing Indian: Mary Kelm argues that the ___ discourse in the past has normalized social hierarchies
a. In Europe ___ discourse in the urban center produced knowledge about what it meant to be European and likewise, the meaning of “others” raised questions of primitivism and ___

A

medical

a. medical, modernity

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3
Q

Indian Hospitals:

a. Prior to the 1890’s hospitals in Canada were financed by charity and government. Wealthy received care, while the sick poor patients stayed ___
b. By the 1920’s hospital attracted patients who demanded and would ___ for the benefits that medicine seemed to promise

A

a. home

b. pay

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4
Q

Origins of segregated care:

a. ___ minorities in the west and the poor were often kept in separate wings, away from ___ patients
b. “Indian ___”: were often financed by the Department of Indian affairs

A

a. Racial, white

b. wards

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5
Q

Tuberculosis: The White Plague

a. Prevalent among __ peoples
b. Risk factors included dislocation, poverty, malnutrition, overcrowding and ___ housing
c. Indigenous children contracted TB in ___ schools
d. Tuberculosis sanitariums in the west would rarely admit __ ___ patients

A

a. Indigenous
b. inadequate
c. residential
d. First Nations

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6
Q

Indian Hospitals:

a. The Indian Hospital (___ Qu’appelle )was opened in 1909, this facility specialized in the treatment of ___, but many of the Indian Hospitals served as general hospitals for First Nations and metis communities
b. These hospitals did not welcome ___ healing, and standards were much kept much ___ than “regular” hospitals

A

a. (Fort) Tuberculosis

b. traditional , lower

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7
Q

Indian Health Services:

a. IHS was created under the __ Act and the structure of Indian Affairs and reflected the coercive tools forcing First Nations to comply with ____stipulated in the Indian Act
b. Indigenous patient experiences in Indian Health Services hospitals varied… some patients became well other were ___

A

a. Indian, regulations

b. traumatized

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8
Q

IHS and Indigenous Labor and Nursing:

a. Most Indigenous workers were in the least ____, lowest paid positions, but made up a large portion of the work force in ___
b. Indigenous RN’s who worked in hospitals were trained outside the IHS ___ at accredited provincial institutions… they were discouraged to returned to ____

A

a. skilled, hospitals

b. system, reserves

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9
Q

Jean Goodwill 1928-1997 B. Poundmaker First Nation:

a. Goodwill spend several of her teenage years hospitalized with ___
b. She was one of but growing number that achieved mainstream ___ education in the 1950’s
c. Cofounded the ___ Nurses of Canadian Indian Ancestry (RNCIN)

A

a. tuberculosis
b. nursing
c. registered

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10
Q

Indigenous Control: was an important organizing principle for Indigenous ____

a. expresses the goal of self-____ and self government in the field of health
b. Also, challenges the lack of consultation by ____ with Indigenous people
c. Indian control articulated Indigenous people’ difference in terms of their cultural and ___ place within Canada and the rights that derive from it
d. Takes on more specific meanings with Indigenous ___

A

nurses

a. determination
b. government
c. historical
d. nursing

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