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First Nations members vital to Island Health services

Sabrina Blanchard grew up a member of the Selkirk First Nation in the Yukon. Now, she is embarking on a career as a licensed professional nurse working in the neuroscience unit at Victoria General Hospital. Blanchard鈥檚 recruitment was part of an Island Health effort to create a workforce reflective of the population of Vancouver Island, including its First Nations people. But make no mistake, she is not part of a quota 鈥 she is all about health care.

Sabrina Blanchard grew up on home-dried fish and moose meat, hearing her First Nations language, Tutchone, spoken at family gatherings and in her Yukon school, where it was taught.

Now, when Blanchard is at work, as a nurse in the neurological unit at Victoria General Hospital, and encounters a First Nations patient, there鈥檚 a little moment of recognition.

It鈥檚 not extra-sensory. It鈥檚 just a little acknowledgment of two people with some similar cultural histories and a mutual respect for shared experiences.

鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of cool, like we are all part of this club,鈥 said Blanchard, laughing, in an interview.

She said she grew up a member of the Selkirk First Nation near Dawson City in a small town called Mayo. The town was not on a reserve, but its population was mostly First Nations, so 鈥渋t鈥檚 got that rez feel.鈥

And three weeks ago, when she started work as a nurse, it marked a small milestone for Island Health. Blanchard became the 500th person who comes from a First Nations background to work for Island Health.

For four years, Island Health has been recruiting employees to make its workforce of about 18,500 employees representative of the Vancouver Island population it serves.

Steve Sxwithultxw, co-ordinator of the aboriginal employment program, said the number of First Nations people working for Island Health has more than doubled in the four years the program has been operating, from 199 at the outset.

Sxwithultxw, himself a member of the Penelakut community near Thetis Island, said apart from developing a workforce representative of the Vancouver Island, the move to hire more First Nations people just makes administrative sense for the health authority.

More people are retiring from the organization, leaving vacancies, he said.

鈥淲e need to make sure we get those jobs filled,鈥 Sxwithultxw said.

鈥淥ne of the things we鈥檝e recognized is there is a lot of talent in our own backyard with the First Nations and aboriginal people living on Vancouver Island.鈥

But he emphasized the effort to hire First Nations people is not about quotas or keeping score. It鈥檚 about providing better health care for all Vancouver Island, including the people of its First Nations.

鈥淥ur standards are high and they need to be,鈥 said Sxwithultxw. 鈥淵ou must have the training and you must have the education.鈥

鈥淎ll our hires are based on merit,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just because you are an aboriginal person.鈥

Ian Knipe, Island Health鈥檚 director of Aboriginal Health, said it just makes sense that a doctor or nurse or any other health-care worker will more easily establish a meaningful relationship with a patient when they share a cultural background.

And so it goes for First Nations people encountering a First Nations person working in a health-care setting.

鈥淲e want to make it so aboriginal people will feel welcomed, respected and understood in their health-care system,鈥 said Knipe.

He said Island Health, however, has found itself working against some terrible history: Residential schools, child welfare snatches, even horrible Indian hospitals, where aboriginal TB patients were quarantined in poor conditions, isolated from their families and communities, sometimes for years.

The unfortunate result for First Nations people living in the present is they often don鈥檛 show up in hospitals, clinics or doctors鈥 offices as quickly as health providers recommend. Their historic mistrust of official institutions, including hospitals, keeps them away.

鈥淭hey don鈥檛 feel welcomed or they don鈥檛 feel respected,鈥 Knipe said.

鈥淪o they hold off accessing care until their pain reaches the point where they really can鈥檛 stand it anymore,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 only then they go to a hospital or even just see a doctor.鈥

So one of the small steps Island Health has made in recent years is insisting new buildings are constructed with what are being called all nations healing rooms.

For example, in the new patient care tower at the Royal Jubilee Hospital is a space, built with advice from Vancouver Island First Nations elders. It features carvings from aboriginal artists and a picture created by a M茅tis artist.

It鈥檚 also a space where First Nations patients are welcome to complete special cultural practices, such as smudging, cleansing or singing.

鈥淚f a First Nations patient says they want to have a smudging ceremony as part of their healing, then we should be able to work with them and their family to actually bring that about,鈥 Knipe said.

Meanwhile, Blanchard is just happy to be working as a nurse, in a specialized unit such as neuroscience, dealing with things such as brain and spine trauma.

She gives full credit to the Aboriginal Employment Program for encouraging her to apply and helping her with things such as her resum茅.

But now she is a nurse first, hoping to assist all patients of all backgrounds.

Nevertheless, Blanchard said she understands and respects, some of the cultural nuances that come with a First Nations background.

For example 鈥 and she is careful to make it clear she doesn鈥檛 like 鈥渂lanket statements鈥 applied to any people 鈥 First Nations people can seem to take a little longer to get to a point.

For First Nations elders in particular, it can seem an affront to enter an official setting like a hospital and then face a busy health-care worker asking personal questions and demanding direct answers.

鈥淏ut once trust is established, there can be a real meaningful back-and-forth relationship,鈥 said Blanchard. 鈥淚t can just take a little more listening to learn where they are coming from.鈥

鈥淪o for myself, I try to use a little humour, listening and I鈥檓 respectful,鈥 she said.

If there is one cultural surprise she has encountered, it arises from living in British Columbia after growing up in the Yukon.

鈥淚 find not a lot of people here have a good understanding of native culture,鈥 Blanchard said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a surprise how many people have no experience with native people or have never even met a native person.

鈥淎nd they live here in sa国际传媒,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 crazy.鈥