Indigenous Diabetes Care
Cross-source consensus on Indigenous Diabetes Care from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
Uses
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Where it comes from
Highlighted claims
- Indigenous Peoples in Canada face social, cultural, historical, and geographic barriers to diabetes care. — ‘It’s not just diabetes’: implementation enablers and barriers of an indigenous-focused virtual diabetes care clinic using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) – a qualitative assessment
- Rising diabetes rates among Indigenous populations are linked to colonisation-related disruptions, inequities, and historical trauma. — ‘It’s not just diabetes’: implementation enablers and barriers of an indigenous-focused virtual diabetes care clinic using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) – a qualitative assessment
- Indigenous communities have called for diabetes care that is culturally safe, strengths-based, and responsive to local context. — ‘It’s not just diabetes’: implementation enablers and barriers of an indigenous-focused virtual diabetes care clinic using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) – a qualitative assessment
- Geographic and cultural barriers to specialty diabetes services persisted after earlier RADAR work. — ‘It’s not just diabetes’: implementation enablers and barriers of an indigenous-focused virtual diabetes care clinic using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) – a qualitative assessment