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Promoting good health in Rankin Inlet creates a rewarding career

Promoting good health in Rankin Inlet creates a rewarding career

As a public health nurse in Rankin Inlet, Angnaluaaq (Tia) Friesen's work is focused on preventative health and being proactive to ensure people in her community stay healthy.
'What I really like is working upstream, like preventing things before they happen, ' Friesen said.
A good part of that work for Friesen is public outreach and health promotion throughout the community.
'It would be going to the schools to educate kids on how to wash your hands, or talking to the middle school or high school about smoking cessation, smoking reduction or vaping, and really trying to prevent people getting seriously sick down the road, or preventing illnesses from going around.
'It's really fun to go out to the community and to have that connection.'
'And another reason why I like to go to the schools is to show other young Inuit that they could also go to school, even at a later point in life; it doesn't have to be right after high school to go to college or go to university.
'It can be later where you have other life experience, and you're able to mature and I find having this kind of job is really beneficial for my own independence because it's really empowering,' Friesen said.
May 12 – 18 is National Nurses Week and a time to celebrate the vital role nurses provide in the health care system. This years' theme is The Power of Nurses to Transform Heath.
Friesen said her public health work also includes clinic appointments for newborn babies and children, plus immunizations or early detection for anemia or other health issues. She also does TB or sexual health screening in her daily work.
And while she said there is always 'pushback' on some health topics, she gets enjoyment from the fact that she is always learning something new in her role that ultimately increases the quality of care for her patients.
After studying to become a nurse in Nova Scotia, Friesen said she was happy to return to her hometown to care for her family and to see many familiar faces.
'And it's nice that when people come in the clinic every once in a while and say that it's nice to have an Inuk nurse,' she said.
'What I like about providing care at public health is when people are taking care of themselves and putting themselves first. And for some people, that's really hard to do.'

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Annual report tracks Canada's progress toward addressing the national crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, and 2SLGBTQI+ people
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time4 days ago

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Annual report tracks Canada's progress toward addressing the national crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, and 2SLGBTQI+ people

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Omega-3 is vital for your health. These are the signs you're deficient
Omega-3 is vital for your health. These are the signs you're deficient

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time5 days ago

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Omega-3 is vital for your health. These are the signs you're deficient

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Coming home: Elders return to Nunavut for care after years of living in the south
Coming home: Elders return to Nunavut for care after years of living in the south

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time30-05-2025

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Coming home: Elders return to Nunavut for care after years of living in the south

Three years ago, Eric Anoee Jr., along with his family, made the difficult decision to move his brother Bernard from Arviat, Nunavut to Embassy West, a seniors' living facility in Ottawa. Bernard had just been diagnosed with dementia and there was no 24-hour care available to him in Nunavut. As Anoee Jr. describes it, they had no choice. But after three years, Bernard is coming home. He's one of a handful of Nunavut elders who are being transferred back to the territory to live in the new 24-hour elder care facility in Rankin Inlet which opened this month. Last week, Anoee Jr. received a call that Bernard would be one of the elders sent to live in the new home. "It's been a long time waiting," Anoee Jr. said. "Obviously Ottawa is very far away from home and we can't see him ... so we were very excited about Bernard coming home." Although Rankin Inlet is still a short flight away, Anoee Jr. said there's a world of difference between Ottawa and Nunavut. "When I visit the Embassy West, I can kind of feel that the Inuit residents feel out of place," he said. "They know that they're far away from home. Coming back to Nunavut is a going to be a really good thing for patients." In a statement in the Legislative Assembly this week, Health Minister John Main said the first few elders have already arrived at the new care home in Rankin Inlet, which has 24 beds. He said three or four elders will arrive every week for the next few weeks. "A state-of-the art facility, the first of its kind in Nunavut, awaits them with a culturally enriching, safe, and home-like environment," Main said. He also said the health department has placed a "strong focus" on employing Inuit at the home. "We know that the elders who will live there want to hear Inuktitut being spoken. They want Inuit values and culture reflected in the activities, and in the food they are served," Main said. Anoee Jr. remembers when he and his other brother were tasked with moving Bernard out of Arviat. "It was a pretty long, emotional journey having to move him to southern Canada," he said. Despite not having full-time care available in Arviat, Anoee Jr. said the whole community helped to support Bernard. "I found out that the support system is there even though it's not a whole lot. The health department really helped us there, and the family and community. If he was wandering away from town our friend would tell us to pick him up." It was also the first time Anoee Jr. had experienced caring for someone with dementia. "It's very hard to have a loved one suffering from dementia," he said. As of Friday, Anoee Jr. said his brother hadn't arrived yet, but he was awaiting his arrival.

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