Objective: This study sought to understand the beliefs and perspectives of women in northern Ontario and their obstetrical providers with respect to water birthing as access to this service is limited in this region Methods: All midwives, family physicians (FPs), and obstetricians providing labour and delivery services in northern Ontario were surveyed, as were a sample of labour and delivery nurses in the region and convenience samples of regional women.
Background: Compass North is a student-led health outreach initiative in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada. A current unmet need in Thunder Bay identified in a previously published community needs assessment is mental health services. Women, youth, senior, Indigenous, and LGBT2-SQ populations were disproportionately affected. In response to these perceived gaps in services, a subcommittee of Compass North developed, delivered, and evaluated mental health workshops.Methods: Affiliations with Shelter House Thunder Bay (SH) and Anishnawbe Mushkiki Thunder Bay Aboriginal Health Access Centre (AM) were established. Six interactive workshops were developed and delivered over eight months. Likert scale-based evaluation surveys gauging workshop participant and presenter satisfaction with content were used. Attendance and return attendance were additional markers of success. Results: A total of 36 participant surveys were completed between both sites. Response rates were 74% and 84% at SH and AM, respectively. Workshop content was well-received by participants and helped address some unmet health education needs. Attendance increased with time at SH.Conclusions: These interactive workshops are one way of addressing unmet community needs in Thunder Bay while maintaining a community presence prior to establishing a fully functional student-run clinic (SRC). They comprise a potentially valuable stage in development of a SRC.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.