Abstract
Community-based first aid training is the collaborative development of locally relevant emergency response training. The Sachigo Lake Wilderness Emergency Response Education Initiative was developed, delivered, and evaluated through two intensive 5-day first aid courses. Sachigo Lake First Nation is a remote Aboriginal community of 450 people in northern Ontario, Canada, with no local paramedical services. These courses were developed in collaboration with the community, with a goal of building community capacity to respond to medical emergencies. Most first aid training programs rely on standardized curriculum developed for urban and rural contexts with established emergency response systems. Delivering effective community-based first aid training in a remote Aboriginal community required specific adaptations to conventional first aid educational content and pedagogy. Three key lessons emerged during this program that used collaborative principles to adapt conventional first aid concepts and curriculum: (1) standardized approaches may not be relevant nor appropriate; (2) relationships between course participants and the people they help are relevant and important; (3) curriculum must be attentive to existing informal and formal emergency response systems. These lessons may be instructive for the development of other programs in similar settings.
Highlights
Context: Community-based first aid training is the collaborative development of locally relevant emergency response training
This article considers the intersection of conventional first aid education and the remote fly-in Aboriginal community of Sachigo Lake First Nation in sub-Arctic Canada
Course curriculum and pedagogy were based on community priorities, needs, and feedback received through community consultation
Summary
Community-based first aid: a program report on the intersection of community-based participatory research and first aid education in a remote Canadian Aboriginal community. D VanderBurgh[1], R Jamieson[2], J Beardy[3], SD Ritchie[4], A Orkin1 1Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre, Thunder Bay, ON Canada 2Alberta Health Services, Calgary, Alberta 3Sachigo Lake First Nation, Sachigo Lake, ON Canada 4School of Rural and Northern Health; ECHO (Evaluating Children’s Health Outcomes) Research Centre, Laurentian University, Sudbury, ON Canada. Submitted: 13 February 2013; Revised: 9 August 2013; Accepted: 23 August 2013; Published: 15 April 2014 VanderBurgh D, Jamieson R, Beardy J, Ritchie SD, Orkin A. Community-based first aid: a program report on the intersection of community-based participatory research and first aid education in a remote Canadian Aboriginal community Rural and Remote Health 14: 2537.
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