New online tool allows Indigenous patients to anonymously report racism in health-care system - Action News
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British Columbia

New online tool allows Indigenous patients to anonymously report racism in health-care system

The B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres, whose website hosts the app,aims to use the information to figure out patterns of racist incidents in the health-care sector,and present solutions on how to address these issues with policymakers.

Safespace app on B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres site aims to identify patterns of racism

B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres executive director Leslie Varley says the Safespace app allows First Nations patients to anonymously report racism they encounter in the health-care system without fear of retaliation. (CBC The Sunday Edition)

Indigenous patients are now able to anonymously report experiences of racism in B.C.'s health-care system, thanks to a newonline tool.

Safespaceallows people to share their own or their loved ones' experiences in a health-care facility and rate the facility on a five-point scale.

The B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres (BCAAFC), whose website hosts the app,aims to use the information to figure out patterns of racist incidents in the health-care sector,and present solutions on how to address these issues with policymakers.

The project was inspired by the independent investigative reportinto racism in the B.C.health care released by former judge Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafondlast November,the associationsaid in a news release.

Safespace was created by Canadian Medical Association president-elect Dr.Alika Lafontaine, an Alberta-based anesthesiologist of Anishinaabe, Cree, Metisand Pacific Islander descent.

A man wearing blue surgical garb looking up at the camera.
CMA president-elect Dr. Alika Lafontaine invented the Safespace app. (Canadian Medical Association)

Lafontaine says he decided to create the app based on his and fellow Indigenous doctors' experience of racism in the health-care sector.

"I've been racialized as a [health-care] provider. I've been racialized as a patient and as a family member of someone going to the health-care system," he said.

"Coming from that perspective, we had just a really strong sense for why it's important to be part of the solution to solving the problem."

Lafontaine says he expects Safespacewill soon be adopted by Indigenous organizations across the country.

The BCAAFC,which has centres in 25 municipalities across the province, is among the first to implement the app and hasspent the first part of this year offering workshops on how to use it.

BCAAFCexecutive directorLeslieVarleysays Safespace allows Indigenouspatients to voice their concerns without fear of backlash.

Varley,a member of the Nisga'a Nation,says she has seen how racist stereotypes about Indigenous people that they're addicted to alcohol or have a higher tolerance for pain, for example have hurt people she knows who were seeking emergency treatment.

She said in one case, her cousin had to wait seven hours for treatment; in another, an Indigenous friend's baby with a high fever developed brain damage after they were turned away twice at the same hospital, she said.

"The Safespace app was to try to address these stereotypes that mainstream Canadians continue to have about us," Varley said.

WATCH | Report finds evidence of widespread racism against Indigenous people in B.C. health-care system:

Evidence of widespread racism against Indigenous peoples within B.C. health care: investigation

4 years ago
Duration 2:03
An independent investigation has found clear evidence of widespread racism and discrimination against Indigenous patients and staff in the B.C. health-care system.

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With files from Daybreak North