2016
DOI: 10.1080/15265161.2016.1159749
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Aboriginal Health Care and Bioethics: A Reflection on the Teaching of the Seven Grandfathers

Abstract: Contemporary bioethics recognizes the importance of the culture in shaping ethical issues, yet in practice, a process for ethical analysis and decision making is rarely adjusted to the culture and ethnicity of involved parties. This is of a particular concern in a health care system that is caring for a growing Aboriginal population. We raise the possibility of constructing a bioethics grounded in traditional Aboriginal knowledge. As an example of an element of traditional knowledge that contains strong ethica… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…This work, therefore, is a meaningful contribution to an understanding of the moral dimensions of Anishinaabeg children's everyday lives. Similar to commonalities between the Seven Grandfather Teachings between Anishinaabeg and Ojibway cultures, the results of this study may be transferable to some other Indigenous children's experiences (Kooiman et al, 2012, Kotalik & Martin, 2016. Our results highlight the everyday ethical challenges the children navigated; demonstrating how they can act as moral agents.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
“…This work, therefore, is a meaningful contribution to an understanding of the moral dimensions of Anishinaabeg children's everyday lives. Similar to commonalities between the Seven Grandfather Teachings between Anishinaabeg and Ojibway cultures, the results of this study may be transferable to some other Indigenous children's experiences (Kooiman et al, 2012, Kotalik & Martin, 2016. Our results highlight the everyday ethical challenges the children navigated; demonstrating how they can act as moral agents.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
“…7 There have been calls for developing Indigenous bioethics, 8 including analyses of important distinctions between Western and Indigenous ethical approaches to health care such as how Indigenous patients understand core bioethical concepts like autonomy and non-maleficence. 9 These differences in thought impact all aspects of Indigenous health care and how providers approach fundamental tasks like revealing diagnoses or encouraging surgeries. 10 Indigenous ethics place great value on individual decisions made in the context of community input.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In response to the mounting chronic mental illnesses among Indigenous populations, Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux and Andrew Snowball (2010) have called for the integration of traditional, cultural, and spiritual practices tied to the Seven Grandfather's teachings as a way of dealing with chronic mental illness and advancing bimaadiziwin in Indigenous communities. The Seven Grandfather's teachings are gifts of knowledge provided to the Anishinaabek to help them as they work towards living a good life (Kotalik and Martin 2016). We view, and have applied practices to support, bimaadiziwin as an appropriate response to chronic mental illness because it contains the key element of time and a process unfolding across the life-course.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%