[Witness speaks in Ojibwe]
I'm from the Lunaapeew nation, otherwise known as the Delaware first nation of southwestern Ontario. I'm the executive director of the National Native Addictions Partnership Foundation. Thank you for the invitation to speak with you today.
I want to cover five different areas today if I have enough time. I want to give you an overview of some of the issues related to addressing prescription drug abuse with first nation communities, a little about public health, primary health care, and community development and those linkages. I want to talk to you about collaboration and integration, and then look at a systems approach and our broader ecological systems approach.
In terms of issues, common strategies to address prescription drug abuse are not readily available in first nation communities and are even more challenging in rural and isolated areas. For example, there's no public health or comprehensive primary health care systems in first nation communities. There's a lack of coordination and collaboration between public health and primary health care systems and first nation communities. There's a lack of coordination across jurisdictions: provincial, territorial, and federal health authorities. There's little understanding of the benefits of pharmacological interventions to address prescription drug abuse issues among first nations people.
There's also a lack of and no access to withdrawal management and opiate medication-assisted treatment such as methadone, buprenorphine, or naloxone, specifically as they are linked to or working in collaboration with first nation communities and community health programs. When methadone maintenance treatment is available, clients from first nation communities often have to travel long distances, putting strains on medical travel budgets administered by first nation communities, and this adds up to significant daily costs.
There's a lack of appreciation of the impacts of colonization among prescribers and service providers. Therefore there's a lack of trauma-informed care to first nations people.
Approaches to health promotion, prescription drug abuse prevention and treatment don't often consider broader issues such as the relationships between addictions, mental health, co-morbidities, concurrent disorders, pain, and chronic disease. Some of the impacts of those issues are increased use of alcohol to manage withdrawal and increased use of heroin. There's an increased risk of blood-borne communicable diseases, and there are accidental overdoses and deaths, and increased violence.
First nations children are 15 times more likely than the rest of Canada to be in care in the child welfare system. Drug trafficking is almost four times higher than the rest of Canada, according to Public Safety Canada. Rates of domestic violence are five times higher than in the rest of Canada, and mental health and addiction issues certainly play a significant role in employability.
The change required to address prescription drug abuse issues requires change in the way governments do business. We need more horizontal work across governments and between government departments with first nations as key partners. We need support for a comprehensive framework that can be used to guide communities, regions, tribal councils, health authorities, provincial and territorial governments, and federal departments in knowing how to adapt, optimize, and realign programs and services to be more responsible and flexible in meeting the needs of first nations people.
We need to recognize that first nation communities aim to achieve wellness, and that this perception of health is often distinctly different than a medicalized model of health because the first nations' focus on wellness is more holistic. It promotes an equal balance between mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual aspects of life.
The issues among public health, primary care, and community development are that they don't often work together, especially when it comes to working with first nation communities.
But there is good evidence that there are great benefits when they do collaborate—public health, primary care, and first nation communities—specifically in the areas of maternal child programs, communicable disease prevention and control, health promotion and health protection, chronic disease prevention and management, programs specific to youth, programs specific to women, and substance use and mental health issues.
Solutions have to focus on the social determinants of health for first nation communities, and they have to include and be reflective of indigenous knowledge and culturally relevant evidence. There's a need for increased support for protective factors, such as appreciation of culture and linkages to cultural identity, use of our traditional first nation languages, culturally relevant education, access to high school, recreational activities, and linkages to cultural practitioners and elders.
We need resources and policies focused on community development and capacity building, and increased support to identify, develop, promote, and evaluate evidence-informed and culturally safe practices. We need comprehensive workforce development in first nation communities.
One of the systems approaches that has been developed culminated over four years in the creation of what is known as “Honouring our Strengths: A Renewed Framework to Address Substance Use Issues Among First Nations People in Canada”. This was a collaboration between the Assembly of First Nations, Health Canada, and the National Native Addictions Partnership Foundation. It describes an integrated, culturally relevant, client-focused system of services and supports for addressing substance use issues for first nations. The framework identifies best and promising practices to strengthen and support programs at the community, regional, and national levels and across related jurisdictions. The framework implementation to date has focused on strengthening a system of care; improving the quality of programming that currently exists in the national native alcohol and drug abuse program and the national youth solvent abuse program; ensuring better measurement, oversight, and research; and enhancing coordination and integration at all levels. The implementation of the framework represents an opportunity to support a comprehensive response to prescription drug abuse issues for first nations.
An example of some promising practices is this framework was used to inform a discussion between the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, the Chiefs of Ontario, and the first nations and Inuit health branch of Health Canada. There have also been community development programs in place, called mental wellness development teams in Ontario, that have a focus on community development and show promising practices.
There have been culture-based opioid replacement therapy programs, where first nations have invested their own funds in Suboxone for opioid replacement therapy, because it wasn't readily available to match the needs of the community. The community has found that it's easier to store than methadone, and easier to dispense in remote communities. They found it worked well with holistic treatment programs that were land-based programs that included counselling with cultural practitioners, culturally relevant community development initiatives, and life skills development.
Currently we're in the process of developing a broader ecological systems approach. It's called the first nations mental wellness continuum framework. It's currently under way, and it describes the vision for first nations mental wellness with culture as the foundation. It emphasizes first nations' strengths and capacities. It provides advice on policy and program changes that should be made to improve first nations mental wellness outcomes, and it focuses on cultural values, sacred knowledge, indigenous knowledge, language, practices of first nations, and understanding that these are essential to the social determinants of health for individuals, families, and overall community wellness. It has five themes, identified after regional discussions, national discussions, and discussions with federal government departments.
The first theme is that culture has to be the foundation. Two is community development and ownership, and the others are quality health systems and competent service delivery, collaboration with partners, and enhanced flexible funding investments.
What we've heard to date is that new investments are needed in addition to the realignment of existing resources. Also needed is improved information-sharing among federal departments, improved coordination of programs and services, and the mapping of authorities to see where collaboration is possible. There is a need for more flexible ongoing funding to support community-identified needs. There is a need to build on what is working in first nation communities, and align federal programs and services that impact mental health and addiction services for first nation communities.
Overall some of the key aims are to move from an examination of our deficits as first nation communities to a discovery of our strengths by focusing on culture. From the use of evidence absent of indigenous world views, values, and culture, we need to move to indigenous knowledge that sets the foundation for evidence in approaches for addressing prescription drug abuse. It also involves moving from a focus on inputs for individuals to a focus on outcomes for families and communities, and finally, moving from uncoordinated and fragmented services to integrated models for funding and service delivery.
I'm not sure where I am in time but I'm just going to keep talking until you cut me off.