a healthier you | may 2014

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Presented by Northern Health and Glacier Media A Healthier You Keep the Best and Leave the Rest More to Health than a Physical Exam Connecting the Future to the Past May 2014 page 18 page 14 page 6 $ 4 .99

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Northern BC’s health information magazine.

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Page 1: A Healthier You | May 2014

Presented by Northern Health and Glacier Media

A Healthier You

Keep the Best and Leave the Rest

More to Health than a Physical Exam

Connecting the Future to the Past

May 2014

page 18

page 14

page 6

$4.99

Page 2: A Healthier You | May 2014

A Healthier You | 2 | May 2014

Page 3: A Healthier You | May 2014

May 2014 | 3 | A Healthier You

contentsMAY2014

846

1011121418202224

CEO Welcome

Keep the Best and Leave the Rest

Honouring Tobacco-Free Living

2014 All Native Basketball Tournament

Aboriginal Culture = Enriched Travel

More to Health than a Physical Exam Connecting the Future to the Past

Staff Profile: Lloyd McDames

North Coast Health Improvement Society

How Can We Help?

Making Wellness A Family Affair

Proud supporter ofNorthern Health

16

Getting Your Feet Back on a Natural Path

Cover Photo Credit: Pole at Skedans (K’uuna), credit: Susan Clarke, Northern BC Tourism Acknowledgements: We would like to thank the First Nations Health Authority, Northern B.C. Tourism, and Northern Health staff for their contributions to this issue.

Page 4: A Healthier You | May 2014

A Healthier You | 4 | May 2014

Did you know that nearly 20% of the population in northern B.C. is Aboriginal (inclusive of First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples)? Development of the First Nations Health Authority and the signing of the Partnership Accord between the First Nations Health Council - Northern Regional Caucus, First Nations Health Authority, and Northern Health motivate our tenth edition of A Healthier You. This edition highlights some of the unique ways in which Aboriginal peoples approach health and wellness.

As the First Nations Health Authority plays a larger role in the health and wellness of Aboriginal peoples across the province and in the north, it is important for health workers and the general public to become aware of Aboriginal approaches to health and wellness. In this spirit, this issue explores holistic health and wellness with highlights from Aboriginal communities in northern B.C.

Stories included in this edition shed light on a variety of perspectives of Aboriginal health and wellness. Our feature story considers the First Nations Health Authority’s Wellness Model and how it incorporates holistic wellness. From communities in northern B.C., we are proud to showcase how our staff are supporting Aboriginal health and wellness through programs and services. In addition, Northern Health staff members have contributed other ways in which they are connecting with traditional cultures to support healthy living today – and for the future.

I hope you enjoy this edition of A Healthier You!

Welcome!

Cathy Ulrich | President and chief executive officer

Cathy has held her position of president and CEO of Northern Health since 2007.From 2002 to 2007, she was the organization’s vice president, clinical services andchief nursing officer. Before the formation of Northern Health, Ulrich worked in avariety of nursing and management positions in northern B.C., Manitoba, andAlberta. Most of her career has been in rural and northern communities, giving her asolid understanding of their unique health needs.

CEO Welcome

A Healthier You is published by

A product of

Page 5: A Healthier You | May 2014

Spring/Summer 2014: Your Daily Dose of Health and Wellness

May• National Physiotherapy Month• Speech and Hearing

Awareness Month• May 1: National Aboriginal

Diabetes Day• May 5: Save Lives: Clean Your Hands• May 5-11: National Mental

Health Week• May 12-18: National Nursing Week• May 20-23: Aboriginal

Awareness Week• May 31: World No Tobacco Day

June• Brain Injury Awareness Month• Recreation and Parks Month• June 2-8: National Sun

Awareness Week• June 1: National Cancer

Survivor’s Day• June 5: Clean Air Day• June 15: World Elder Abuse

Awareness Day• June 21: National Aboriginal Day

July• July 19-26: National Drowning

Prevention Week• July 28: World Hepatitis Day

Join the #healthynorth conversation!

All across Canada, specific dates are set aside to bring awareness to various aspects of our health. Here are some dates you might be interested in! Stay tuned to blog.northernhealth.ca and our Facebook page to learn more about these important events as they get close. How can you get involved in healthy living events in your community?

Do you have a community event coming up that promotes health? Tell us about it!

Email [email protected]

For more information, visit Health Canada’s Calendar of Health Promotion Days online at: www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ahc-asc/calend/index-eng.php.

Event Calendar

May 2014 | 5 | A Healthier You

Page 6: A Healthier You | May 2014

In 2014, the possible responses to “what’s for dinner?” are very different than when I was growing up. I remember sitting down every night with my family to a meal made by my stay-at-home mother. It wasn’t fancy food but it covered the basics.

Today, the average grocery store carries more than 40,000 items, which is a far cry from my uncle’s shop where we bought most of our groceries. The amount of choice has expanded the variety of foods that are available to us. I had never tasted broccoli before leaving home at age 18, whereas my daughter has been exposed to a wide variety of foods in her short lifetime. This variety has also brought foods, which — while convenient for our busy lifestyles — are questionable from a nutrition quality point of view. For example, walk down the cereal aisle at your grocery store and you’ll see many boxes that would’ve passed for candy in my childhood.

As I get older, it is easy to reflect that “things were better back then.” We get that sense when we hear healthy eating experts promote diets that focus on whole and unprocessed foods as the answer to some of our chronic health problems,

Keep the Best and Leave the Rest: How Our Diets Change Over Time By Flo Sheppard, registered dietitian, Northern Health

For Flo’s homemade pizza dough recipe, visit blog.northernhealth.ca/healthy-eating/get-social-eat-healthy/

like diabetes and heart disease. However, I know that diet change is common to humans all over the world. Few of us eat and enjoy diets identical to those of 100 years ago; new foods are added and old foods are replaced or become less important. The challenge is to keep the best and leave the rest.

Healthy Eating

A Healthier You | 6 | May 2014

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Keep the Best and Leave the Rest: How Our Diets Change Over Time By Flo Sheppard, registered dietitian, Northern Health

Photo Credits: Flo Sheppard

Here are some tips to get started:

• Connect with your parents, their parents and other elders in your life to learn about the types of foods they ate, how they prepared them, and what they served with them. How could you tweak them to add the best of today’s ingredients? For example, add whole grain flour to Granny’s loaf recipe.

• Grow, catch, gather or hunt some of your food, or connect with your local farmers’ market.

• For ideas on what to eat, look to the First Nations, Inuit and Métis version of Canada’s Food Guide at http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/pubs/fnim-pnim/index-eng.php

• Check if your local grocery store offers food and nutrition tours. If not, check out “Shopping Sense,” BC’s virtual grocery store tour, at http://www.healthyfamiliesbc.ca/home/articles/topic/grocery-shopping

• For specific food or nutrition questions, connect with a registered dietitian by calling 8-1-1 (Monday – Thursday 9 am – 9 pm; Friday 9 am – 6 pm) or check with your local hospital.

May 2014 | 7 | A Healthier You

Page 8: A Healthier You | May 2014

Healthy Eating

Getting Your Feet Back on a Natural Path By Agnes Snow, retired Northern Health staff member

How often do you get back to nature? Returning to nature has therapeutic benefits for our health. Research shows that access to nature is important to the healthy development of children and very important to the mental and physical health of adults. In many larger communities, people have difficulty finding places to enjoy time with nature, or perhaps they can’t afford the travel or the time to get away.

In northern B.C., we have some advantages in this regard. Many of our communities are surrounded by nature’s majesty. This makes accessing places to enjoy time in a natural environment relatively easy. Even in our larger centres, getting to the river’s edge is often only a matter of a quick walk.

Aboriginal communities have many lessons to share about enjoying nature in ways that improve our health and well-being. Looking to the land as a guide and as a provider is still the backbone of Aboriginal cultures. Many of our friends and colleagues who are of Aboriginal ancestry return to the land regularly. This is common especially in the late summer and early fall for berry picking, hunting and fishing. These expeditions can provide food for families and others in the community, as hunters will present parts of the hunt or catch to the Elders and other families in their communities.

Berry picking is a bit back-breaking, but really worth it! The skills to work with foods we have picked directly from the earth are dwindling, but many people, both Aboriginal and non–Aboriginal, carry on the traditions of processing and preserving food from the land for themselves. Berries are a great example of how, with labour on our part, the bounty of the earth can be transformed and can feed our families: berries will reappear throughout the winter baked in pies, as jams, jellies and syrups, or dried in baking and snacks. Frozen blueberries may show up in muffins or pancakes in January.

The food also serves as a way to remember the time you spent harvesting it. The burst of tart sweetness can bring back the scent of summer in an instant. The brightness of the day you knelt among low bush blueberries, with the sun on your back and the sound of honey bees surrounding you. Memories like these can warm a cold winter’s day with the promise of summer. In this way, the berry’s life cycle is a way to return to the land and finding satisfaction, physically, emotionally and nutritionally.

The berry’s story tells us that the land can give us more than just food; the land can do more than just physically feed people. Nature also feeds our spirit and soul.

A Healthier You | 8 | May 2014

A version of this article originally appeared on the Northern Health Matters blog (September 28, 2012). For more stories about personal health and wellness, please visit blog.northernhealth.ca.

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May 2014 | 9 | A Healthier You

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A Healthier You | 10 | May 2014

On February 18, Nisga’a Valley Health celebrated the success of building tobacco-free spaces in the community of Gitlaxt’aamiks (New Aiyansh). The event showcased a recent tobacco-free school project. Tobacco-free spaces are important to the health of children and youth and so children came together to draw images of what tobacco-free spaces mean to them. The images were printed on large weather-proof banners and are on display outside the school. The work is supported by tobacco-free champions in the valley (pictured here).

The work was supported by Northern Health’s Imagine Grant program. For more information about Imagine Grants, please visit www.northernhealth.ca/yourhealth/healthylivingcommunities/imaginegrants.aspx.

Honouring Tobacco-Free Living2 14

Nisga’a Valley Health

Page 11: A Healthier You | May 2014

May 2014 | 11 | A Healthier You

Unity, pride, and community: these are the off-court principles that push the All Native Basketball Tournament to its inarguable success. Held in Prince Rupert every February, this year’s event drew thousands of spectators and 56 basketball teams from Aboriginal communities across the north. Being held for over 50 years, it has the honour of being the longest-held sports event in B.C.

It is a destination and focus for northern communities, as the prestige associated with the tournament encourages healthy choices by team members, their families and supporters in the run-up to the games themselves. For many communities, the annual trip to the tournament is an important social and cultural event as they can gather with friends and families from other remote communities. The sport and cultural atmosphere is a powerful connection and place of belonging for the communities and Nations who attend.

Northern Health is proud to be part of the event since 2006, which started with one lone table on tobacco reduction. Since then, Northern Health’s presence has grown alongside of the tournament. In the past, we have offered a more clinical service through the offering of

2014 All Native Basketball Tournament: More Than a Sporting Event By Theresa Healy, healthy community development, and Doreen Bond, tobacco reduction coordinator

Event Highlight

health screenings. This year, we sponsored and hosted a quiet space furnished with cozy furniture and low lighting. This space offered a retreat where Elders could rest in comfort, nursing moms could feed their babies in peace, and traditional stories were shared. Health screenings were still offered, but the focus was on the gathering and comforting space, rather than the clinical space. The space was reflective of supporting a complete healthy community; a way of integrating social and cultural gathering with health services. While the tournament is an important contributor to the health and well-being of northern First Nations, this year, for the first time, people spoke of the tournament as a place where, sport, culture and health comes together.

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A Healthier You | 12 | May 2014

By Susan Clarke, Northern BC Tourism

Northern B.C. is an ideal place to experience the culture and history of BC’s First Peoples. The rivers and lakes that many of us value for recreation are the ancient highways that connected cultures; interesting points of geography are often the inspiration for traditional stories which pass on meaningful lessons. Aboriginal cultures are an inseparable part of the Northern B.C. experience, and while international travelers strive to incorporate these experiences into their visits to Canada, residents often overlook the same opportunities. When traveling in your own backyard, here are some ways to learn about Aboriginal cultures in northern B.C.

In the far west, a visit to Haida Gwaii offers insights into the history, culture and art of the Haida Nation. The Haida Heritage Centre at Kay Llnagaay is an award-winning complex, where vibrant culture is celebrated and artifacts are displayed. A long-time vision of the Haida people, the centre officially opened in 2008, and seeks to educate and preserve, as well as provoke change.

Visiting the southern third of the Haida Gwaii archipelago, known as Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site, takes planning – as it is only accessible by boat or floatplane. Many visitors describe their experience of the abandoned villages, dotted with slowly decaying monumental poles and longhouse beams, as a religious experience. The Gwaii Haanas is the only area in the world that is officially protected from mountain peaks to the ocean’s floor.

Near Prince Rupert, the Tsimshian region is one of the oldest continuously occupied regions of the world. Last summer, genome testing proved that a living woman from

‘Ksan Historical Village and Museum, credit: J F Bergeron, EnviroFoto

For Enriched Travel,

Northern BC Tourism

Add CultureMetlakatla is a direct descendent of female remains found in the area which are over 5,500 years old. The Museum of Northern B.C. in Prince Rupert houses Tsimshian, Haida, Kwakwaka’wakw and Tlingit regalia and ceremonial objects, and interprets regional history from ancient to modern times. The Nisga’a Museum in the Nass Valley is home to the Ancestor’s Collection, a group of 330 artifacts returned to the people as part of the Nisga’a Final Agreement. The collection has been described by experts as “one of the preeminent collections of northwest coast art in the world.” The museum in Laxgalts’ap (Greenville) opened in 2011.

Kitselas Canyon Historic Site is just 15 kilometers outside of Terrace. On site, an interpretive trail leads to four crest poles and a lookout over the Skeena River.

If you are driving, stop in to see the Totem poles of Gitwangak (Kitwanga), Gitanyow (Kitwancool) and Kispiox. These are some of the oldest known poles in the province. (Stop at a Visitor Centre for directions or more details.)

‘Ksan Historical Village and Museum in Hazelton is the “oldest Native cultural facility in Canada.” The re-created village, with elaborately painted longhouses and carved poles, is located on the same site as the original Gitxsan village of Gitanmaax. An excellent way to introduce yourself to Gitxsan culture is to take a guided tour of ‘Ksan.

Moricetown Canyon, about 40 kilometers west of Smithers, is a spot where the rushing Bulkley River squeezes into a narrow canyon, making a perfect place to nab passing fish. Stone tools, nets and other archaeological finds are on

Continued on page 13

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May 2014 | 13 | A Healthier You

Kitselas Canton National Historic Site, near Terrace, credit: Susan Clarke, Northern BC Tourism

Nisga’a Memorial Lava Bed Park, credit: J F Bergeron, EnviroFoto

display in the Interpretive Centre that overlooks the canyon. Use the pullout at the side of the highway to see net fishing in process.

Fort St. James National Historic Site is now home to the Strangers and Swan’s Down interpretive gallery, which examines the life of Chief Kw’eh of the Nak’azdli First Nation. Audio recordings and artifacts help bring the Nak’azdli and Métis history of the area to life.

In northeastern B.C., the Spirit of the Peace Pow Wow, held each June, is a family friendly event which welcomes all peoples.

We do not have to travel to another country to experience remarkable and historic cultures. There are many ways to witness and learn about Aboriginal cultures as a traveler - or resident - in northern B.C.

Page 14: A Healthier You | May 2014

Health & Wellness

More to Health than a Physical Exam: A First Nations Perspective on WellnessPhysical symptoms of an illness are often at the forefront when someone visits a doctor’s office, but the First Nations Health Authority believes there is much more to good health than just a physical exam.

The First Nations Perspective on Wellness, developed in collaboration with communities around the province, encourages individuals and the medical community to look beyond physical ailments and take a more holistic approach to care. According to the perspective, by digging deeper into the mental, emotional and spiritual aspects of health, medical practitioners and patients can gain a broader understanding of the root causes of existing health issues and preventing illness by supporting and promoting a health and wellness approach.

“Often there are physical symptoms of an illness that might only have been treated in a physical manner [in the past],” First Nations Health Authority director of health surveillance Dr. Shannon Waters said. “But there’s actually mental, emotional, or spiritual aspects to what might be leading to those physical symptoms. Without being fully recognized, those things don’t often come up during an individual patient visit.”

The First Nations Health Authority (FNHA) began taking over federally funded health service delivery for First Nations communities at home or ‘on-reserve’ in the province last year. Previously it had been the federal government’s responsibility to administer and provide health care to First Nations communities through the First Nations Inuit Health Branch of Health Canada, as across the rest of the country.

As part of its effort to be responsive to the communities it serves, the FNHA undertook extensive community engagement to find out what First Nations in B.C. felt was important when it came to their own health and how they accessed health care. Many of the responses focused on a need to both shift away from an illness model towards a wellness model, as well as focus on the strengths in the community rather than the deficits. One result of that work is the First Nations Perspective on Wellness.

“It’s the collective understanding that everything around the individual impacts their health,” said Nicole Cross, FNHA regional director for the north and a member of the Nisga’a First Nation. “It’s more than just not washing your hands and then catching a cold. It branches out into having a healthy environment, having healthy land and having a healthy community with the support built in there.”

The wellness perspective is displayed as a circle, with a human being at the centre and a community of people - children, adults and Elders - around the outside holding hands representing the importance of a healthy community. In between there are four rings of key words that can be

considered essential to long-term health and prosperity.

In the ring closest to the individual are: physical, emotional, mental and spiritual - four areas of wellness that can be considered when assessing someone’s overall health.The next ring contains wisdom, respect, relationships and responsibility, showing how individuals and groups interact to promote good health.

The next ring includes family, land, Nations and community and the outer ring contains the determinants of health: social, economic, cultural and environmental.

Although the connection between culture and health may seem abstract, Cross said it’s fundamental to understanding the identity of an individual. She said the importance and strength of community and culture is apparent in any town hall meeting in a First Nations community when people get together to talk about health issues.

“You need to know who you are,” she said. “It’s so important to have those roots, that Nation and that culture support everything that you do.”

The wellness model concept is dynamic. It’s just as important for the human being at the centre of the circles to take responsibility for their physical, emotional, mental and spiritual health as it is for the community - both locally and as a province - to create the conditions that allow that person to be healthy.

By Peter James, Citizen staff

A Healthier You | 14 | May 2014

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May 2014 | 15 | A Healthier You

More to Health than a Physical Exam: A First Nations Perspective on Wellness Northern Health Tip:

Get healthy. Stop using tobacco.

One of the best things you can do for your health is to stop using tobacco of any kind!

Feel better about yourself: • Getting sick more easily • Shortness of breath • Shame • Stress about having to quit

Improve your looks:

• Premature aging and wrinkles • Yellow teeth and fingers • Smelly clothes, breath, car, house

In order for the perspective to be fully realized, it will be important for doctors, nurses and others in the medical community to have a better understanding of local culture and history. That’s already started with an online course available to all provincial health care workers called Indigenous Cultural Competency, but Cross said that is being further enhanced as local communities are in the process of developing their own information for medical professionals.

Dr. Waters, who is from the Chemainus First Nation on Vancouver Island, said that by understanding where a local First Nations person is coming from, it will be easier for the medical team to employ a holistic care model because the relationship between caregiver and patient will be stronger.

“The mental and spiritual aspects are often something that has been uncomfortable for a patient to bring up because it’s very individual and different for each First Nations person, community or Nation,” she said. “It’s about making the space and time for physicians and patients to realize that this is an important thing to talk about.”

Cross said by engaging caregivers and the community at large into the holistic approach, it will help people feel more empowered about how they receive their health care, which she believes will translate into a healthier population overall.

“For the first time this [perspective] is really reflecting what our communities are telling the medical community,” Cross said. “If we reach a place where our health care providers and our communities are focused on wellness and focused on strengths and moving away from illness, then the ideal goal is that our community members will be a lot healthier and a lot more well.”

Although many of the issues that could arise from the outer rings are out of the direct scope of a health authority, Dr. Waters said the holistic approach used by the FNHA includes engaging other provincial government departments and the federal government, alongside the politically-focused First Nations Health Council, to ensure they are met.

“I really think this is an example of how the First Nations Health Authority is going to blaze the trail, lead the way and have aspects of care that other health care systems are going to want to strive to have,” she said.

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A Healthier You | 16 | May 2014

Health & Wellness

Making Wellness A Family Affair By Peter James, Citizen staff

Finding ways to stay active and healthy has never been a problem for the Ghostkeeper family.

From father Chad’s successful international fastball career to son Tristan’s budding career in dance, family members have long seen the value of keeping fit and credit their activity in part for their health.

“I grew up doing all sorts of sports, I started with baseball, then went to swimming then I ended up at dance, which I’ve been doing for a good 10 years now,” Tristan said. “I

like to keep myself busy with something and be committed to something.”

Tristan, 18, is preparing to attend the Goh Ballet Academy in Vancouver this fall where he’ll continue to pursue his dream of a dance career with an international company.

Initially sparked by an interest in music videos and dancers at live concerts, Tristan is now hoping his well-rounded dance skills will take him to Europe and beyond.

Chad’s sports career has allowed him to travel around North America for tournaments, meeting new people and making friends along his way. He’s preparing for one more season at the elite level and expects to play in seven or eight competitive tournaments across the continent this spring and summer.

“I’m 42 years old and I’m going to go one more year,” he said. “The body is holding up, but last year I had a couple of injuries.”

Tristan’s siblings Tanner, Tyson, Shayla, Sierra and Laina have also been active in sports like hockey, baseball and swimming.

Chad said it was always important to make sure his children had active living options, especially in the electronic age where it’s so easy to get distracted by online games and social media.

“We try to keep our kids busy because we don’t want them coming home and sitting on the couch playing games for four or five hours,” he said.

Chad got his own start in sport at a young age, first with hockey and then with baseball. His uncle Charlie Ghostkeeper helped put him on the path to fastball success when he assembled a team of young players and had them compete in the men’s league in Prince George.

“We got better and better and better,” he said. “We were the type of kids that if we weren’t doing anything on a Saturday or a Sunday, we’d go to the park and hit balls.”

All that practice paid off as Chad got noticed by a team in California and has had success on the international stage winning the top catcher award at major tournaments. At one point he cracked Team Canada’s 40-man roster.

While fastball and dance have been the activities of choice for the Ghostkeepers, Chad said sports has long been an important part of Aboriginal culture. He pointed to the many high-level hockey tournaments hosted across the country as evidence the importance of sport continues to thrive.

In addition to the physical benefits of his dance career, Tristan said it has also taught him the value of eating well. In recent years he had noticed that he was becoming more

Chad and his son Tristan Ghostkeeper take living an active lifestyle seriously.Citizen photo by David Mah

Page 17: A Healthier You | May 2014

May 2014 | 17 | A Healthier You

Making Wellness A Family Affair By Peter James, Citizen staff fatigued after long days in the studio and decided to take

the initiative to find ways to eat better.

Making the change in diet wasn’t always easy, but he said it has been worth it. He’s noticed great results

since he added more fruits and vegetables into his diet and started to consume less food high in sugar.

“It takes a lot to do dance - physically, emotionally, artistically - so you have to keep in shape and eat the right things so that you have the energy for the day,” he said.

Participating and staying active has only been part of Chad and Tristan’s commitment to their passions. They both have given back to the community, Chad by coaching minor hockey and baseball teams and Tristan by coaching and mentoring young dancers.

Both Chad and Tristan hope their commitment to active living will inspire other people in the north, Aboriginal

and non-Aboriginal alike, to find their own venues to explore ways to stay fit.

“It’s definitely important to have that role model because I think Aboriginal people sometimes think they can’t make it, or they can’t go anywhere,” Tristan said. “I think it’s great to have people like me and my dad to show there is hope and you can go places and people are going to accept you like anyone else.”

Page 18: A Healthier You | May 2014

A Healthier You | 18 | May 2014

Northern Light: Connecting the Future to the Past By Trevor Kehoe, First Nations Health Authority

The First Nation communities of Kwadacha and Tsay Keh Dene, located nearly 600 kms north of Prince George, have always known that their independence and community connections make them strong. Whether it be game-changing innovation in energy and food self-sufficiency, or building a remote Elders camp with a focus on traditional knowledge transfer, these communities are walking a path of wellness together.

Returning to the traditional ways of harvesting local foods is bringing these and other First Nation communities full circle and it’s this connection to food and the land that maintains the spiritual connection to harvesting. Members of the Kwadacha Nation are taking this full circle approach and combining efforts on a number of initiatives including the creation of a traditional Elders camp only accessible by boat upriver from the village. The camp has become an education centre with scheduled informal classes that youth, adults

Former Chief of Kwadacha, Emil McCook, touring one of the community greenhouses. Photo by Trevor Kehoe, First Nations Health Authority.

First Nations Health Authority

and Elders can join, spreading the traditional knowledge that has allowed the Nation to thrive for generations.

The education circle in the camp is ensuring the essential traditional knowledge transfer of the harvest, but also the ways to live a healthy life spiritually, mentally, emotionally and physically. Anything from fishing, hunting, traditional cooking, nutrition, craft-making to spiritual lessons could be on the agenda on any given day.

Back in Kwadacha, Emil McCook has spearheaded the development of three community greenhouses that have become a beacon of activity over the years. Socializing, helping out and learning year by year has opened up the community to understanding more about harvesting vegetables and flora: what grows best, when and how. What’s grown in the greenhouses is freely available for the community to pick and with more greenhouse plans on the table, the seed of the harvest is sprouting in town.

Downriver in Tsay Keh Dene, a Biomass energy initiative is planned to convert waste wood into renewable heat for public buildings and a proposed greenhouse facility, while generating income. The project has huge potential for other rural communities and could easily be followed by other Nations looking for greater energy self-sufficiency and a secure, efficient and sustainable source of highly nutritional foods. With ample supply, the local Elder, school, and family food programs flourish.

Today First Nations throughout the province are moving forward with their own initiatives and returning to the traditional ways that kept them healthy in the past. Independently, all that is needed is a healthy environment to thrive in as they will for the next seven generations.

This article was originally printed in the inaugural issue of the FNHA’s Spirit Magazine ‘The Harvest. Read the full article at www.fnha.ca.

Page 19: A Healthier You | May 2014

D#30541

The 7th

Annual

Proudly Presents

Healthy ChildrenGolf InvitationalHealthy ChildrenGolf Invitational

Friday, August 10,2012

All proceeds benefit

The Child Development

Centre of Prince George

“Save me a seat”

Every $1000 helps fund

a child for a year at

the development centre

Part of Northland’s $2 million dollar commitment to local healthcare

Co-ordinated by the Spirit of the North Healthcare Foundation

"I hope that within less than two years we have a state-of-the-art helicopter air ambulance that can �y day or night in all conditions. I’d like to see helipads in all outlying communities, working in conjunction with the B.C. Ambulance Service to provide the utmost care to sick and injured people in northern B.C. It will bene�t all of the people in the North." ~ Brent Marshall - president/chair of Northern B.C. HEROS (Helicopter Emergency Rescue Operations Society)

H.E.R.O.S.Helicopter Emergency Rescue Operations Society

###FOR AREASON!

The Canadian Cancer Society’s Kordyban Cancer Lodge is the recipient of a $300,000 pledge from Northland and the Marshall family. All the money has stayed local and has helped with the construction costs for the lodge which is slated to open in late 2012.

Kordyban Cancer Lodge

1995 - 20th Avenue, Prince George, BC (250) 562-5254

1-866-865-86311-866-865-86311-866-865-8631

www.northernbcheros.orgwww.northernbcheros.org

DOWNTOWN: Commonwealth Health Centre opens A3Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Newsline 250-564-0005

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TNW Wine Festival uncorks a really good time

A13

A former Prince George man is among five Canadians who were killed in an explosion at a Mexican resort Sunday.

Malcolm Johnson, 33, was killed in a freak gas explosion at the Grand Riviera Princess Hotel in the beach city resort of Playa del Carmen on Mexico’s Caribbean coast.

Johnson, who worked as a real-tor in Prince George but moved to Nanaimo and worked out of Coast Realty Group’s downtown Nanaimo office, was in Mexico with his new wife Heather Pynten, whom he had married days before the explosion, and their one-year-old daughter Audrey.

“People were showing up [to work] just sick about it,” said Ron Williams, Johnson’s managing bro-ker in Nanaimo.

Another realtor with Coast who had gone to Mexico for Johnson’s wedding informed co-workers of his death Sunday afternoon.

Johnson had been with Coast Realty for six years, specializing in condominium sales.

“He was never ever down or cranky, he just always saw the posi-tive side of things,” said Forbes. “He was a real good guy.”

Johnson was also a director on the Downtown Nanaimo Business Improvement Association board.

Five Canadian tourists and two hotel employees were killed in the explosion, which took place Sunday morning in the hotel lobby.

A news release on the Quintana Roo state website states that Mexi-can officials believe the blast took place because of natural gas accu-mulating in a cavern under the hotel.

FormerP.G. mankilled in

explosion

■ PHILANTHROPY

Feels like a million bucksPediatric ward named in honour of Northland Dodge donationARTHUR [email protected]

The pediatric wing of the Uni-versity Hospital of Northern B.C. has been named the Northland Dodge Paediatric Wing.

Northland Dodge manage-ment and staff raised $1 mil-lion over five years to support upgrades to child care at the hospital.

“I’d like to thank everyone for what is both a huge honour for my team at Northland Dodge and my family,” Northland owner Brent Marshall said. “I’m just so impressed by how many people in the North took part. It’s gone by very quickly.”

Marshall said he was, “shocked,” when approached by Northern Health about renam-ing the wing.

The funding raised by the dealership has supported proj-ects including an outdoor deck adjoining the wing, library and family room, ceiling lifts, wire-less communication system, spe-cial cribs and many other proj-ects, Northern Health chairman Charles Jago said.

“They were all special things we couldn’t do without donor support. They’re all things that enhance our ability to meet the needs of patients,” Jago said. “B.C. supports a very good health system. (But) philan-thropy is that margin of dif-ference between very good and excellent.”

The maternity and pediatric wings of the hospital are now state-of-the-art facilities, he said.

Health Services Minister Kevin Falcon attended the renam-ing ceremony on Monday and presented the Marshalls with a plaque honouring their contri-bution.

Arthur WILLIAMS/Free Press

Northland Dodge owners Brent and Kali Marshall and their children eight-year-old Carter, seven-year-old Cassie and three-year-old Jaxon celebrate the renaming of the pediatric ward at the University Hospital of Northern B.C. The Northland Dodge Paediatric Wing was named in recognition of the $1 million donated by the auto dealership.

• Gas furnaces • A/C and heat pumps • Indoor air quality systems*Rebate offer is valid only with the purchase of qualifying Lennox® products. **See dealer for details and other offers.

910 Third Avenue,Prince George, BCCanada, V2L 3C9

Phone 250-563-6444Toll Free 1-800-219-6327Fax 250-563-8893Email [email protected]

OFFER EXPIRES

11/30/2010

+ $1,400$1,000

in ProvincialRebate Incentives**

Lennox Rebate*

$2,400 Total Potential Savings

upto

upto

Plus 6 months, no interest, no payment fi nancing OAC with the purchase of a qualifying Lennox system.**

It’s impossible to save too much money,but this is pretty close.

Northland Dodge owners Brent and Kali Marshall and their children eight year old Carter, seven year old Cassie and three year old Jaxon celebrate the renaming of the pediatric ward at the University Hospital of Northern BC. The Northland Dodge Pediatric Wing was named in recognition of the $1 million donated by the auto dealer-ship.

Pediatric WingDonation Excedes1 Million!

The Child Development Centre of Prince George is also the bene�ciary of the proceeds from the 7th Annual Healthy Children’s Golf Invitational sponsored by the Northland Auto Group and hosted by the Spirit of the North Healthcare Foundation. Approximately $30,000 - $50,000 is raised annually at Northland Autogroup golf tournaments.

The ChildDevelopmentCentre

MOTORSPORTS PARK

BC’S PREMIERMOTORSPORTS PARK

RACINGFOR THE

COMMUNITY!

RACINGFOR THE

COMMUNITY!With Proceeds ToLocal Charities!

www.northlandmotorsportspark.com

Northland owner Brent Marshall and his family celebrate the renaming of the pediatric wing at the University Hospital of Northern BC. The Northland Dodge Pediatric wing was named in recognition of over $1 million dollars donated by Northland Dodge and the Marshall family.

The Lodge which opened one year ago, was the recipient of a $350,000 pledge from Northland and the Marshall family. All the money stayed local and helped with the construction costs for the lodge.

D#30541

The 7th

Annual

Proudly Presents

Healthy ChildrenGolf InvitationalHealthy ChildrenGolf Invitational

Friday, August 10,2012

All proceeds benefit

The Child Development

Centre of Prince George

“Save me a seat”

Every $1000 helps fund

a child for a year at

the development centre

Part of Northland’s $2 million dollar commitment to local healthcare

Co-ordinated by the Spirit of the North Healthcare Foundation

"I hope that within less than two years we have a state-of-the-art helicopter air ambulance that can �y day or night in all conditions. I’d like to see helipads in all outlying communities, working in conjunction with the B.C. Ambulance Service to provide the utmost care to sick and injured people in northern B.C. It will bene�t all of the people in the North." ~ Brent Marshall - president/chair of Northern B.C. HEROS (Helicopter Emergency Rescue Operations Society)

H.E.R.O.S.Helicopter Emergency Rescue Operations Society

###FOR AREASON!

The Canadian Cancer Society’s Kordyban Cancer Lodge is the recipient of a $300,000 pledge from Northland and the Marshall family. All the money has stayed local and has helped with the construction costs for the lodge which is slated to open in late 2012.

Kordyban Cancer Lodge

1995 - 20th Avenue, Prince George, BC (250) 562-5254

1-866-865-86311-866-865-86311-866-865-8631

www.northernbcheros.orgwww.northernbcheros.org

DOWNTOWN: Commonwealth Health Centre opens A3Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Newsline 250-564-0005

w w w . p g f r e e p r e s s . c o m

TNW Wine Festival uncorks a really good time

A13

A former Prince George man is among five Canadians who were killed in an explosion at a Mexican resort Sunday.

Malcolm Johnson, 33, was killed in a freak gas explosion at the Grand Riviera Princess Hotel in the beach city resort of Playa del Carmen on Mexico’s Caribbean coast.

Johnson, who worked as a real-tor in Prince George but moved to Nanaimo and worked out of Coast Realty Group’s downtown Nanaimo office, was in Mexico with his new wife Heather Pynten, whom he had married days before the explosion, and their one-year-old daughter Audrey.

“People were showing up [to work] just sick about it,” said Ron Williams, Johnson’s managing bro-ker in Nanaimo.

Another realtor with Coast who had gone to Mexico for Johnson’s wedding informed co-workers of his death Sunday afternoon.

Johnson had been with Coast Realty for six years, specializing in condominium sales.

“He was never ever down or cranky, he just always saw the posi-tive side of things,” said Forbes. “He was a real good guy.”

Johnson was also a director on the Downtown Nanaimo Business Improvement Association board.

Five Canadian tourists and two hotel employees were killed in the explosion, which took place Sunday morning in the hotel lobby.

A news release on the Quintana Roo state website states that Mexi-can officials believe the blast took place because of natural gas accu-mulating in a cavern under the hotel.

FormerP.G. mankilled in

explosion

■ PHILANTHROPY

Feels like a million bucksPediatric ward named in honour of Northland Dodge donationARTHUR [email protected]

The pediatric wing of the Uni-versity Hospital of Northern B.C. has been named the Northland Dodge Paediatric Wing.

Northland Dodge manage-ment and staff raised $1 mil-lion over five years to support upgrades to child care at the hospital.

“I’d like to thank everyone for what is both a huge honour for my team at Northland Dodge and my family,” Northland owner Brent Marshall said. “I’m just so impressed by how many people in the North took part. It’s gone by very quickly.”

Marshall said he was, “shocked,” when approached by Northern Health about renam-ing the wing.

The funding raised by the dealership has supported proj-ects including an outdoor deck adjoining the wing, library and family room, ceiling lifts, wire-less communication system, spe-cial cribs and many other proj-ects, Northern Health chairman Charles Jago said.

“They were all special things we couldn’t do without donor support. They’re all things that enhance our ability to meet the needs of patients,” Jago said. “B.C. supports a very good health system. (But) philan-thropy is that margin of dif-ference between very good and excellent.”

The maternity and pediatric wings of the hospital are now state-of-the-art facilities, he said.

Health Services Minister Kevin Falcon attended the renam-ing ceremony on Monday and presented the Marshalls with a plaque honouring their contri-bution.

Arthur WILLIAMS/Free Press

Northland Dodge owners Brent and Kali Marshall and their children eight-year-old Carter, seven-year-old Cassie and three-year-old Jaxon celebrate the renaming of the pediatric ward at the University Hospital of Northern B.C. The Northland Dodge Paediatric Wing was named in recognition of the $1 million donated by the auto dealership.

• Gas furnaces • A/C and heat pumps • Indoor air quality systems*Rebate offer is valid only with the purchase of qualifying Lennox® products. **See dealer for details and other offers.

910 Third Avenue,Prince George, BCCanada, V2L 3C9

Phone 250-563-6444Toll Free 1-800-219-6327Fax 250-563-8893Email [email protected]

OFFER EXPIRES

11/30/2010

+ $1,400$1,000

in ProvincialRebate Incentives**

Lennox Rebate*

$2,400 Total Potential Savings

upto

upto

Plus 6 months, no interest, no payment fi nancing OAC with the purchase of a qualifying Lennox system.**

It’s impossible to save too much money,but this is pretty close.

Northland Dodge owners Brent and Kali Marshall and their children eight year old Carter, seven year old Cassie and three year old Jaxon celebrate the renaming of the pediatric ward at the University Hospital of Northern BC. The Northland Dodge Pediatric Wing was named in recognition of the $1 million donated by the auto dealer-ship.

Pediatric WingDonation Excedes1 Million!

The Child Development Centre of Prince George is also the bene�ciary of the proceeds from the 7th Annual Healthy Children’s Golf Invitational sponsored by the Northland Auto Group and hosted by the Spirit of the North Healthcare Foundation. Approximately $30,000 - $50,000 is raised annually at Northland Autogroup golf tournaments.

The ChildDevelopmentCentre

MOTORSPORTS PARK

BC’S PREMIERMOTORSPORTS PARK

RACINGFOR THE

COMMUNITY!

RACINGFOR THE

COMMUNITY!With Proceeds ToLocal Charities!

www.northlandmotorsportspark.com

Northland Dodge #1 Dealerin BC for 8 years

Northland Dodge Annual Food Drive For Kids has local youth, sports teams, H.E.R.O.S. and Northland staff collecting food donations with all proceeds

to the Salvation Army, with an annual goal of 50,000lbs!

AND PROUDLY THE MOST GIVING

DEALERSHIP IN CANADA!

NOrthlaNd family rOOm

NOrthlaNd cOmmitmeNt

exceeds 2 milliON

Kordyban cancer lodge

Northland3rd annual food

drive for KidsNorthland

childrens Wing of UhNBc

NOrthlaNd cOmmits $3 milliON

tO lOcal charities!

The Northland Motorsports Park is located near the drive-in theatre 10 minutes northwest of the city. With the help of Chrysler Canada, Northland’s two-fold mission is to provide needed funds

for charities in northern B.C. as well as providing a dynamic site for user groups,

participants and their spectators.

Northland dodge

motorsports Park

www.northlanddodge.ca

With PrOceeds tO lOcal charities!

7th annual Northland charity Golf tournament

for the child development

centreAll proceeds stay in Prince George

to assist the CDC.

Brent Marshall with 100 tickets purchased for staff, to help support the Hospice Dream Home Lottery.

Prince George hospice society

We are a charitable group dedicated to providing a rapid-response emergency medical helicopter staffed with advanced life support paramedics and critical care nurses. As a non-profit society, we will have the ability to fund-raise and accept corporate donations to enhance our service. Our mission is to save lives and reduce the long-term costs of medical care for seriously ill and critically injured patients, and to provide a dedicated Rapid Response Emergency Medical Helicopter Service that will fly day and night in all but the worst weather conditions.

every secondcounts!

.... because

For every $500 a registered participant raises (group or individual) they will receive one entry into a draw for a 2014 Jeep Cherokee generously donated by Northland Dodge and RE/MAX.

WWW.NBcherOs.OrG

help us to be the #1 relay for life event in canada and you could

WiN a 2014 JeeP cherOKee

In support of Festival of Trees, Northland owner Brent Marshall purchased this medical UTV which he has donated to the 2015 Winter Games. At the end of the games this unit will have a permanent home with Prince George Search and Rescue.

spirit of the North festival of trees

relay for life

Northland Supports the following charities and more...

R00

1734

686

aNNUal GOal Of 50,000lBs!!!

May 2014 | 19 | A Healthier You

Page 20: A Healthier You | May 2014

A Healthier You | 20 | May 2014

Staff Profile: Lloyd McDames

Northern Health Staff Profile

Born and raised in northwest B.C., Lloyd McDames works in the Terrace area as an Aboriginal patient liaison. He is an employee of Northern Health and serves as a positive role model in his community – both at work and at play.

Page 21: A Healthier You | May 2014

May 2014 | 21 | A Healthier You

1) Tell us a little about yourself and your role in your community.

I am of Tsimshian/Gitxan ancestry and I was born and raised in Terrace. Following high school graduation, I moved to the Nass Valley where I married my wife, Sherry. We have been married for 34 years and we have seven children and 15 grandchildren.

My career background includes: a social worker, correctional officer, probation officer, family court counselor, B.C. Parole Board member, executive director child welfare, and an Aboriginal child and youth mental health worker. These various careers have taken me to the Nass Valley, Terrace, Victoria, and the Hazeltons. We moved back to Terrace two years ago. My current role with Northern Health is as an Aboriginal patient liaison at Mills Memorial Hospital in Terrace.

2) What are some of the best features of the northwest that support your health and wellness?

Some of the features of the northwest that I enjoy are the outdoor activities that are available to us year-round. I enjoy walking, hiking and fishing and teaching my grandchildren how to harvest and prepare our traditional foods in a respectful manner.

3) What do you do to live a healthy life?

I enjoy time with my children and grandchildren and also drumming, singing and dancing our cultural songs with family, community and visitors. These activities allow me to model aspects of a healthy lifestyle with family and community. This is very important to me.

Page 22: A Healthier You | May 2014

A Healthier You | 22 | May 2014

North Coast Health Improvement Society By Kim Nicholls

Based in Prince Rupert, the North Coast Health Improvement Society’s mandate is to raise funds to sustain charitable projects for education and health care. In 2013, fundraising efforts helped to purchase medical equipment to support residents of the north coast, including:

• Bone mass density scanner $91,000• CT work station $43,000• Two colon scopes $34,000• Recto scope set $30,000• Pediatric equipment $7,000• Tympanic thermometers $780

We are currently fundraising for a dental treatment chair at Acropolis Manor (a residential care facility in Prince Rupert). The chair will facilitate residents that have little to no mobility and help to prevent and raise awareness of oral cancers. The total fundraising needed for the chair is approximately $17,000.

For more information, please contact: PO Box 326, Prince Rupert, BC, V8J 3P9

Foundation Update

Page 23: A Healthier You | May 2014

May 2014 | 23 | A Healthier You

Page 24: A Healthier You | May 2014

A Healthier You | 24 | May 2014

How Can We Help? Aboriginal Patient LiaisonsBy Victoria Carter, Aboriginal health engagement and integration lead

Want some help navigating the health system? Aboriginal patient liaisons can assist.

Northern B.C. has a large Aboriginal population and the Aboriginal patient liaisons work to support their unique needs by increasing access to services and improving the quality and experience of health care. As such, the Aboriginal patient liaison program is an important part of working toward improvements in the health of Aboriginal people in northern B.C. In their own words, this is what some of the Aboriginal patient liaisons have to say about their work:

“[I] help the patient understand, question and contribute to the treatment plan.” –Lloyd McDames, Aboriginal patient liaison in Terrace

“I go to the doctors’ offices with clients and translate using my language to interpret what the doctors are saying.” – Angie Combs, Aboriginal patient liaison in Hazelton

As these quotes suggest, Aboriginal patient liaisons are an important link for Aboriginal people to the health system. They can help to make sure health care needs are heard and understood.

If you are an Aboriginal person in Northern Health, they are here to help you with your questions about your health, the

How Can We Help?

tests or treatments you are receiving, and what you should do when you leave the hospital. They will work with you and your health care team to ensure you feel good about the care you are getting. If you need a translator or have cultural and spiritual needs that need to be addressed as part of your care, they can help facilitate this as well.

Here are some of the services they offer:

• Arrange for translation services.• Help patients understand health care processes,

procedures and terminology.• Help to ensure admission and discharge planning

goes according to patient needs.• Assist with advanced care planning.• Facilitate communication and cultural

understanding between patient and care providers.• Connect patient to end-of-life support.• Coordinate spiritual/cultural advisors or

ceremonies.• Support and comfort family and friends.• Assist with community agency referrals.• Help link patients to non-insured health benefits.• Assist with transition to and within long-term care.

Page 25: A Healthier You | May 2014

May 2014 | 25 | A Healthier You

If you would like to contact your local Aboriginal patient liaison, here’s how:

Prince George – University Hospital of Northern BCJune McMullen, 250-565-2364

Hazelton - Wrinch Memorial HospitalAngie Combs, 250-842-4666

Terrace - Mills Memorial HospitalLloyd McDames, 250-638-4085

Burns Lake - Lakes District HospitalKen Solonas, 250-692-2474

Prince Rupert - Prince Rupert Regional HospitalMary Wesley or Matina Sampare, 250-624-2171

Smithers - Dze L’Kant Friendship Centre (Bulkley Valley District Hospital)Lillian Lewis, 250-847-5211

Quesnel - GR Baker Memorial HospitalLyndsey Rhea, 250-985-5812

Fort St. John - North PeaceBev Lambert, 250-261-7418

Chetwynd and Dawson Creek - South PeaceYvonne Tupper, 250-788-7224 (Chetwynd) and 250-795-6109 (Dawson Creek)

Northern Health Tip:

You are sedentary if you sit for more than 6 hours a day.

Do you sit for more than 6 hours a day in total? Think of time you spend: • Sitting when you drive to/from work

(or school) • Sitting at work/school • Leisure time (after work/school)

Long times of inactivity is not only unhealthy, but is dangerous to health. Evidence and messaging is emerging to raise awareness of the sitting diseases. • Take a stand against too much sitting• Sitting leads to sickness. • Sit less, move more! • Stand up: sitting is dangerous to your

health. • Just say “no” to sitting.

Page 26: A Healthier You | May 2014

A Healthier You | 26 | May 2014

Northern Health Tip:

Chemicals and hormones may influence unhealthy weight gain: • Our normal body chemistry balance can

be altered by various situations or our environments, causing us to store fat.

Unhealthy foods can be addictive: • Did you know that sugars and fats cause

the same chemical reaction in the body as other addictive substances like alcohol and tobacco?

Our feelings can affect our healthy habits – how much we move and the foods we eat: • Stress, depression, anxiety and mood

disorders can cause us to eat without thinking about our health.

Page 27: A Healthier You | May 2014

May 2014 | 27 | A Healthier You

Page 28: A Healthier You | May 2014