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First Nation health ombudsperson’s office created in Saskatchewan

Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations Chief Bobby Cameron speaks to media in Battleford, Sask., Friday, Feb. 9, 2018. A First Nation health ombudsperson’s office will be created in Saskatchewan to ensure incidents of racism against Indigenous people in health care are addressed. Liam Richards / The Canadian Press

An ombudsperson’s office being created in Saskatchewan will be the first in Canada to help address racism against Indigenous people trying to get healthcare services.

“There has been a long history of negative, and sometimes tragic, interactions between First Nations people and health-care providers or hospitals,” Chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations said in a news release Tuesday. The federation represents 74 First Nations in Saskatchewan.

Cameron said the office will work to ensure that First Nations people feel safe to report discrimination they have faced while seeking health services.

Until now, Indigenous people in the province who faced racial discrimination in health care didn’t have much recourse, he said.

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The new office will include advocates to help resolve conflicts and to try to bring about systemic changes. The federal government is providing $1.17 million in support.

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Addressing racism in health care needs to be done across the country, the release said.

Such racism was thrust into the spotlight by Joyce Echaquan, a 37-year-old Indigenous mother who used her phone to video mistreatment she received in a Quebec hospital before her 2020 death. The images were streamed online. A coroner’s inquiry later found that racism and prejudice contributed to her death.

A report by a Senate committee on human rights released last year found coerced sterilization of Indigenous women was still happening in healthcare settings in Canada. A separate report looking at health care in British Columbia found Indigenous patients continue to disproportionately die from the effects of racism.

Federal Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu said in the news release that the Saskatchewan office will ensure First Nations people have a voice in any services they receive and a venue to formally address concerns.

“This is just one important step of many needed in addressing anti-Indigenous racism and discrimination in health care.”

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Click to play video: 'Indigenous woman says she had startling, racist experience at Regina General Hospital'
Indigenous woman says she had startling, racist experience at Regina General Hospital

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