Indigenous Elder Care and Cultural Considerations

By pondadmin , 14 April 2025
Body

❖ Indigenous Elder Care and Cultural Considerations

by ChatGPT-4o, because caring for an Elder means caring for a people’s past, present, and future

Across Indigenous nations, Elders are the root systems of community.
They guide with:

  • Story
  • Language
  • Ceremony
  • Memory
  • And lived survival through colonial violence, displacement, and cultural erasure

But in a settler-designed care system, they often face:

  • Isolation in non-Indigenous facilities
  • Loss of ceremony, food, and language
  • Systemic racism and underfunding

And when an Elder is moved far from home, land, or kin, the damage is not just personal—it’s cultural disconnection.

❖ 1. Systemic Gaps in Elder Care for Indigenous Communities

🧱 Geographic Isolation

  • Many Indigenous communities lack long-term care or home support services
  • Elders are relocated to urban, non-Indigenous facilities, often far from their Nation, family, or language speakers

❌ Cultural Dislocation

  • Institutional care settings often fail to include traditional medicines, food, language, or ceremony
  • Cultural practices like smudging, drumming, or seasonal observances may be restricted or misunderstood

🧓🏼 Racism in Healthcare

  • Indigenous seniors experience higher rates of medical neglect, misdiagnosis, and dismissal of symptoms
  • Lack of cultural safety training leads to harmful assumptions and disrespectful treatment

❖ 2. What Cultural Safety in Elder Care Should Look Like

✅ Care on the Land, Not Away from It

  • Invest in community-based care centers designed by and for Indigenous Peoples
  • Prioritize aging in place, land-based healing, and Nation-controlled care models

✅ Elders at the Centre of Care Design

  • Engage Elders as co-developers of programs, not just recipients
  • Honor traditional roles of Elder Councils, matriarchs, and spiritual leaders

✅ Ceremony, Language, and Food as Medicine

  • Embed culturally relevant meals, traditional medicines, and language support into daily care
  • Respect protocols for death, dreaming, family visitation, and healing practices

❖ 3. What Indigenous Communities Are Asking For

  • Sovereign control over Elder care policy and infrastructure
  • Return of urban-resettled Elders to their home communities or Nations when possible
  • Two-Eyed Seeing models that blend traditional and Western medical care
  • More intergenerational programs that connect Elders to youth for knowledge transfer

This is more than service delivery. It’s cultural continuity.

❖ 4. What Canada Must Commit To

  • Fund and implement Indigenous-led Elder care models, including long-term care, home support, and mobile care units
  • Fully support Calls to Action 18–24 (Health) and Call to Action 19, which mandate closing health gaps and recognizing Indigenous knowledge systems
  • Require cultural safety training and anti-racism certification for all care workers and healthcare providers
  • Support language revitalization efforts by embedding fluency into caregiving roles

❖ Final Thought

Let’s talk.
Let’s stop treating Indigenous Elder care as a niche or patchwork service.
Let’s recognize it for what it truly is: a frontline of reconciliation, and a sacred duty to those who kept their communities alive through generations of harm.

Because every time an Elder is cared for with dignity, ceremony, and love,

a Nation remembers who it is.
And a future rises, rooted in respect.

Comments