Black Experiences
Indigenous Experiences
Disabled Experiences
Recall from our Presentation
Previous Course Content
100

What are common ways anti-Black racism manifests in Canadian healthcare? 

stereotyping

dismissal of symptoms

unequal treatment

100

What is cultural safety and why is it important in Indigenous healthcare?

Ensuring healthcare is respectful of Indigenous culture and avoids discrimination 

100

Name a specific physical barrier that may complicate access for a disabled person seeking healthcare or assistance?

A clinic or hospital entrance without a wheelchair ramp, making it difficult or impossible for someone with mobility impairments to enter.

Heavy, non-automatic doors that a person using a wheelchair, walker, or crutches cannot open independently. 

Exam tables that cannot be lowered, preventing many disabled patients from safely transferring onto them.

100

"Differences in the quality of care and treatment between populations" refers to which type of disparity?

Healthcare disparity

100

How might "nothing about us without us" relate to our discussion on Black and Indigenous persons with disabilities in the healthcare system?

Ensures Black and Indigenous disabled people are included in decisions about their own healthcare

Prevents policies that are racist, colonial, or ableist from being made without their input

Leads to care that is culturally safe, accessible, and aligned with community needs

Recognizes lived experience as expertise in designing effective services

Promotes true autonomy and self-determinism in healthcare

200

How does mistrust of the healthcare system affect health-seeking behavior in Black communities? 

Can lead to delayed care 

Avoidance of medical services 

200

In what ways can Indigenous-led health governance improve care for Indigenous communities?

Self-governance

Traditional knowledge integration

Community-directed services 

200

What systemic or structural barriers beyond the built environment might disabled people face when trying to access healthcare?

Long wait times or understaffed clinics, which disproportionately affect people who need frequent or time-sensitive care.

Lack of disability-inclusive policies, such as no support for communication accommodations or personal care attendants. 

Medical ableism, where providers dismiss symptoms, overlook pain, or attribute every issue to the disability itself. 

Limited coverage or financial barriers, where essential supports, mobility devices, or therapies aren't fully funded. 

Complicated referral systems, making it hard for disabled people to navigate multiple appointments or specialists.

Lack of accessible communication, such as no ASL interpreters, inaccessible appointment booking systems, or medical information not available in simple language. 

200

What are some overlapping factors or barriers (think the venn diagram) that contribute to higher health disparities amongst both Indigenous and Black communities?

Systemic racism in healthcare 

Medical distrust from historical harms

Poverty and socioeconomic inequities

Environmental racism

Underfunded or inaccessible services 

200

What does the article about psychiatric abuse against members of the Black Panther Party we read previously for class reveal about Black experiences with healthcare?

Shows how healthcare systems were used as tools of control and punishment against Black activists

Reveals medical racism, including misdiagnosis and harmful treatments rooted in anti-Black bias

Demonstrates how Black people's pain, trauma, and political struggle were stereotyped instead of understood

Highlighted ongoing barriers Black communities face when seeking fair, respectful mental health care 

300

What policies or interventions coud reduce health disparities experienced by Black Canadians? 

Anti-racist training

Diversity in healthcare staff

Equity-focused policies

300

How might residential schools contribute to health disparities?

Trauma

Intergenerational effects

Distrust in institutions 

300

How might the medical perception of disability (which paints disability as something to fix or something inherently associated with poor health) complicate access to healthcare for people with disabilities?

Misdiagnosis or dismissal, where real symptoms are blamed on the disability instead of being taken seriously since disability is often portrayed as the root and only cause of pain/symptoms/sickness.

Less respectful or rushed care, because disabled patients are viewed as "complex" or "difficult."

Avoidance of the healthcare system, since past experiences of judgement or ableism make people hesitant to seek help.

Lack of patient autonomy, where providers assume they know what's best rather than listening to the patient's lived experience. 

Reduced investment in accessibility, because disability is treated as an individual medical issue instead of a social barrier. 

300

Based on the case study about Nell Toussaint, what barriers contributed to her severe health outcomes?

Lack of access to healthcare coverage because of her immigration status

Delayed or denied medical treatment for serious conditions

Financial barriers that prevented her from seeking care earlier

Systemic discrimination against uninsured/undocumented people

Fear of deportation, leading to avoidance of hospitals 

300

How might the week one reading about the labeling of Indigenous students as disabled due to language and cultural differences help us understand similar mislabeling or mistreatment of Indigenous patients in the healthcare system?

Shows how cultural and language differences get misread as deficits rather than understood in context

Reveals a pattern of mislabeling Indigenous people are "disabled," "noncompliant," or "difficult" due to colonial bias

Highlights how systems prioritize Western norms while dismissing Indigenous ways of communicating, healing, and learning

Demonstrates how these biases lead to mistrust, misdiagnosis, and inappropriate treatment in healthcare 

Helps explain why Indigenous patients often face racism, stereotyping, and unequal care in medical settings