In a Good Way: Advancing Funder Collaborations to Promote Health in Indian Country
FOUNDATION REVIEW(2018)
Abstract
Funders continue to be challenged by how to best promote work in American Indian communities that builds health equity, addresses community context, and reduces the disproportionate impact of commercial tobacco. In particular, public health programs that address substance abuse and tobacco control promote the use of evidence-based practices that tend to emphasize a one-size-fits-all approach and that are rarely researched among American Indian populations. This article examines how three organizations collaborated on work to control commercial tobacco use in Minnesota's Indian Country, and shares lessons learned on how they came to incorporate tribal culture, respect traditional tobacco practices, and acknowledge historical trauma to inform their grantmaking.
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Key words
Commercial tobacco control,traditional tobacco,American Indian health disparities,funder collaborations,health equity
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