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Test Bank for An Introduction to Indigenous Health and Healthcare in Canada: Bridging Health and Healing 2nd Edition by Vasiliki Douglas, Newest version rated A+.

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Test Bank for An Introduction to Indigenous Health and Healthcare in Canada: Bridging Health and Healing 2nd Edition by Vasiliki Douglas. CONTENTS PART I INDIGENOUS CULTURE AND HEALTH 1. Introduction: First Nations, Métis and Inuit in Canada: Understanding the Issues 2. Western and Indigenous Ways of Knowing 3. Cultural Competency, Cultural Sensitivity and Cultural Safety 4. Historical Overview PART II INDIGENOUS HEALTH AND THE CANADIAN HEALTHCARE SYSTEM 5. Understanding the Determinants of Health and Canada’s Native Population 6. Diabetes, Diet and Nutrition 7. Chronic and Infectious Diseases 8. Women’s and Children’s Health 9. Mental Health 10. Hybridisation of Healthcare and the Way Forward for Indigenous Health

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Institution
Indigenous Health And Healthcare In Canada
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Indigenous Health and Healthcare in Canada
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Indigenous Health and Healthcare in Canada

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Uploaded on
March 29, 2025
Number of pages
142
Written in
2024/2025
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TEST BANK
An Introduction to Indigenous Health and Healthcare
in Canada: Bridging Health and Healing 2nd Edition
@
TE
ST
BA
N
KM
AF
IA

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CONTENTS
PART I INDIGENOUS CULTURE AND HEALTH

1. Introduction: First Nations, Métis and Inuit in Canada: Understanding the Issues

2. Western and Indigenous Ways of Knowing

3. Cultural Competency, Cultural Sensitivity and Cultural Safety
@

4. Historical Overview

PART II INDIGENOUS HEALTH AND THE CANADIAN HEALTHCARE SYSTEM
TE

5. Understanding the Determinants of Health and Canada’s Native Population

6. Diabetes, Diet and Nutrition

7. Chronic and Infectious Diseases
ST

8. Women’s and Children’s Health

9. Mental Health
BA

10. Hybridisation of Healthcare and the Way Forward for Indigenous Health
N
KM
AF
IA


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Chapter 1 – Introduction: First Nations, Métis and Inuit in Canada:
Understanding the Issues
Test Questions


1. Why did the Canadian government devolve power to Indigenous governments after the
Oka Crisis?

a. Federal politicians wanted to evade responsibility for Indigenous affairs.
@

b. It saved money by devolving costs onto other levels of government.
c. Because Canadian politicians wanted to demonstrate their support for Indigenous self-
government.
TE

d. Possibly all of the above.


2. The Oka Crisis led to increased
ST

a. awareness of Indigenous issues in Canada among both Canadians and internationally.
b. police surveillance of reserves in Eastern Canada.
c. government repression of Indigenous peoples in Canada.
d. anti-Indigenous sentiment among the non-Indigenous population.
BA

e. all of the above.


3. The Canadian Multiculturalism Act
N

a. Entrenched biculturalism in the Canadian constitution
b. Made assimilation part of Canada’s official cultural policy
KM

c. Established the concept of the cultural mosaic as an official part of Canadian identity
d. Entrenched Indigenous culture as part of Canadian identity
e. Made acculturation part of Canada’s concept of the cultural mosaic


4. When did the Government of Canada commit itself to multiculturalism?
AF

a. 1971

b. 1981
IA


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c. 1975

d. 1871


5. What are the implications of universal healthcare for the Canadian heath care system?



a. There are no implications

b. Everyone is treated for illness when they get sick
@

c. Tertiary care services are very important

d. If the health of a part of the population is allowed to suffer, the burden falls on everyone
TE

6. The three founding nations of Canada are


a. French, English and Métis.
ST

b. English, Scottish and the Indigenous peoples.
c. French, English and the Indigenous peoples.
d. French, English and American.
BA

7. The Constitution Act of 1982 defined Indians as persons belonging to one of three groups


a. Métis, Inuit, First Nations.
N

b. Métis, Inuit, Status Indians.

c. Status, Non-Status, Treaty.
KM

d. Status, Non-Status, Inuit.



8. The position of Indigenous peoples in Canada was entrenched in the constitution in
AF

a. 1867.
b. 1982.
c. 1992.
d. 2016.
IA


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9. The range of individual and collective factors and conditions and their interactions that
have been shown to be correlated with health status reflects the recognition that


a. Health is a capacity or resource rather than a state
b. Being able to pursue one’s goals, to acquire skills and education and to grow is a
privilege rather than a right
c. Factors within the healthcare system significantly affect health
@

d. The correlation is specious


10. Health promotion is a way of
TE

a. improving population health.
b. reducing the burden on the public healthcare system.
c. an intrusion on the human rights of the population.
ST

d. a and b


11. What is population health?
BA

a. The overall health of a population
b. The health of each individual in a population
c. A statistical measure of average prescription drug consumption in a population
d. All of the above
N

e. None of the above


12. How does population health relate to individual health?
KM

a. Good population health means that every individual is healthy
b. Poor population health means that every individual is in poor health
c. Good population health facilitates individual health
AF

d. a and b
e. None of the above
IA


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13. The approach that recognises there is a range of social, economic and physical
environmental factors that contribute to health is

a. social engineering.
b. population health.
c. affirmative action.
d. harmful effects reductionism.


14. The Romanow Report identified two important long-term demographic trends
@

a. Both the general population and the Indigenous population are increasing in numbers
rapidly due to high birth rates
TE

b. The Indigenous population is increasing rapidly, but the general population is only
increasing through immigration
c. Both the Indigenous and the general population of Canada are in a state of long-term
demographic decline
ST

d. None of the above


15. Why was the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (RCAP) created?
BA

a. Because the health of Canada’s Indigenous peoples is very poor
b. To find ways to improve employment among the Indigenous population
c. Because the government was embarrassed by the Oka Crisis
d. All of the above
N

16. Why did both the RCAP report and the Romanow Report receive highly mixed receptions
KM

from the governments that commissioned them?


a. Budget cutbacks meant that their recommendations were not followed
b. Their recommendations were intrinsically unrealistic
c. Federal-provincial quarrels over jurisdiction made them hard to implement in practice
AF

d a and c


17. The Ottawa Charter on Health Promotion
IA


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