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A new Black Canadian health course creates space for more EDI education

Posted by Josey Houle, Dal Health freelance writer on February 28, 2023 in News, Innovation, Teaching and Learning
The course was co-created by Dr. Barb Hamilton-Hinch, Michelle Patrick and Dr. Marie Earl.
The course was co-created by Dr. Barb Hamilton-Hinch, Michelle Patrick and Dr. Marie Earl.

After years devoted to its development, a new elective course entitled Centering Black Canadian Health (HLTH 2000) is a much-needed, and highly anticipated, addition to the Faculty of Health鈥檚 curriculum.

Open to Dal Health and Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS) students, the course uses a social determinants lens to educate students on Black Canadians鈥 experiences in health care. This method offers insight into how Canadian education, justice and social systems have impacted, and continue to impact, Black Canadians鈥 physical, emotional, and mental health.

The course was co-created by Dr. Barb Hamilton-Hinch, associate professor in the School of Health and Human Performance, 聽and assistant vice-provost of Equity and Inclusion; Dr. Marie Earl, assistant professor in the Dal School of Physiotherapy and past-chair of the FOH Inclusion and Equity Committee; and Michelle Patrick, associate director in the Office of Community Partnerships and Global Health in the Faculty of Medicine, and special project manager.

鈥淎nything you learn in this course can be applied to any profession that you are going into,鈥 says Dr. Hamilton-Hinch. 鈥淓ven though our focus is on health, it鈥檚 really intentional in people developing a race-conscious lens.鈥

The course opens with an overview of Black peoples鈥 migrations to Canada, with an emphasis on African Nova Scotian experiences. Further curriculum topics include EDI, cultural humility, and selected health topics such as mental health. Stories of Black joy are also actively discussed.

鈥淚t鈥檚 one thing just to focus on the negativity and the challenges that people of African descent experience in Canada,鈥 says Dr. Hamilton-Hinch, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 also important to celebrate the resilience, the strength, the beauty of the Black community.鈥

Across their years on the FOH鈥檚 Inclusion and Equity Committee, Dr. Hamilton-Hinch, Dr. Earl and Patrick have worked tirelessly to address the challenges presented to them by students and faculty. Seeking to make lasting change, they鈥檝e collaborated on Interprofessional Education (IPE) mini courses and Inclusion and Equity Committee initiatives鈥攁ll in addition to their individual roles at the university. Dr. Hamilton-Hinch and Patrick have also taught units on Black health and cultural competencies in Dr. Earl鈥檚 physiotherapy classes.

鈥淭he need to put the spotlight on Black health is not something that can be left undone.鈥 - Dr. Marie Earl

It wasn鈥檛 easy for the three collaborators to develop a university course addressing the challenges faced by people of African descent and African Nova Scotians, when these challenges are perpetuated by the education system itself. 鈥淭he institution wasn鈥檛 built for us to be here, let alone have our content in the curriculum,鈥 says Patrick.

It took longer than planned for them to get Centering Black Canadian Health certified as a credit offering within Dal Health, but they never lost sight of their goal. 鈥淚f we are the institution that is educating and graduating health professionals, we have a responsibility to prepare those health professionals to work with Black populations,鈥 says Dr. Hamilton-Hinch.

Dr. Hamilton-Hinch, Dr. Earl and Patrick look forward to working with and creating more undergraduate and graduate level courses with other faculty members working in the Flagship (connected to the Healthy Population Institute), the up-and-coming 果酱视频 Black Studies Research Institute, and the African Nova Scotian Strategy. Excited that Centering Black Canadian Health has also been introduced into 果酱视频鈥檚 new Black Canadian Studies major curriculum, they stress how Dal鈥檚 Faculty of Health needs to integrate the course, currently an elective, into its core curriculum.

鈥淣ot only are we creating better health professionals, and therefore a better health-care system for Black people, but we are also preparing them to be better colleagues and better citizens,鈥 says Patrick.

Dr. Hamilton-Hinch recalls a particular moment when she received written student feedback on the units she and Patrick taught in Dr. Earl鈥檚 physiotherapy courses. One student wrote about how the Black health and cultural competency content presented have shaped the standards they expect potential employers to meet.

鈥淪tudents are saying, you鈥檝e changed the way I think about my practice,鈥 says Dr. Hamilton-Hinch, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 what we want to see.鈥

Centering Black Canadian Health鈥檚 development was also aided by PhD in Health candidate Crystal Watson and Dr. (PhD Nursing鈥22), BScN grad and instructor Chelsa States, BScHP Grad and medical student Kenisse Trotman, and School of Social work student Likda Morash.