91勛圖

91勛圖 researchers receive $1.76 million to tackle Indigenous tobacco use, lung cancer

91勛圖 researchers hope to develop a model for reducing commercial tobacco use
Photo of Robert Schwartz
91勛圖 Professor Robert Schwartz leads a research team to study tobacco use in Canadian Indigenous communities (photo by Jackie Atlas)

A team led by 91勛圖 researchers Robert Schwartz and Michael Chaiton has received a $1.76 million grant from the Global Alliance for Chronic Diseases to reduce commercial tobacco use and prevent chronic lung disease in Canadian Indigenous communities.

Smoking cigarettes is one of the worst things you can do to your health and is a major risk factor for all lung diseases, said Schwartz, executive director of the and professor of public health policy at 91勛圖's Dalla Lana School of Public Health.

Through the study, researchers will collaborate with 13 Indigenous communities to support the development of culturally appropriate tobacco interventions to reflect socioeconomic, cultural and political influences.

About 18 per cent of Canadians smoke cigarettes, but in the First Nations, Inuit and M矇tis populations, the rates are 35.8 per cent, 59.8 per cent and 33 per cent respectively. The high rates of commercial tobacco use in Indigenous populations have led to a variety of health issues, lower life expectancy than the general Canadian population and higher rates of tobacco-related death.

Working together with communities, we hope the study will help close the very large gap in the relative health burden experienced by Aboriginal as compared to non-Aboriginal people in Canada, said Schwartz, who is also a senior scientist at the .

Read more about Robert Schwartz's research

The study, which will be called Research on Commercial Tobacco Reduction in Aboriginal Communities (RETRAC2), builds on previous research into examining tobacco use in seven Indigenous communities and developed tailored tobacco reduction strategies. The new study will continue that work, along with targeting six new communities in Ontario. It hopes to develop a model for commercial tobacco reduction that can be sustained in Indigenous communities in Ontario and beyond.

Indigenous people want to actively participate in research that improves their communities, said assistant professor Earl Nowgesic, interim director of the and a co-researcher on the project. Thats why we designed this study with Aboriginal people as active participants and attempted to foster relationships between community partners, community participants, collaborating Aboriginal organizations and academic research team members.

The study is one of 13 international research projects on the prevention and management of chronic lung diseases funded by the , a collection of the world's biggest public research funding agencies that supports research activities that address the prevention and treatment of chronic non-communicable diseases on a global scale.

Rearchers who are part of the study also include Assistant Professor Anita Benoit, the interim associate director of the Waakebiness-Bryce Institute for Indigenous Health, and Alethea Keewayosh, the director of the Aboriginal Cancer Control Unit at Cancer Care Ontario.

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