Press Release
Sept. 3, 2024
Unceded territories of the Songhees, Esquimalt and WSÁNEĆ Nations | VICTORIA – The Province of British Columbia and First Nations Health Authority (FNHA) are moving ahead with 13 First Nations primary care centres (FNPCCs) as a key step toward increasing access to culturally safe, primary health care in B.C.
“Dismantling and eradicating Indigenous-specific racism from B.C.’s health-care system continues to be a key priority for our government,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Health. “Part of this work is expanding access to First Nations-led, culturally safe health care and work in partnership with the local First Nations and FNHA. The new FNPCCs will help deliver high-quality, patient-centered primary care for communities around B.C., bringing the care and services people need closer to their homes, and are another important step forward in our journey toward Reconciliation.”
Once all the clinics are in operation, there will be three clinics in each of the five regional health authorities for a total of 15 FNPCCs in B.C.
Of the 13 new centres, 10 will be welcoming patients by fall of 2024, including the Kwakwaka’waka First Nations Primary Care Centre, Nuu-chah-nulth First Nations Primary Care Centre, Coast Salish First Nations Primary Care Centre, Gitxsan-Wet’suwet’en Primary Health Care Centre on Gitxsan Territory, Dadzi Wellness Centre on the Dak’elh First Nations Territory, northern St’át’imc Primary Care Center, Nlaka’pamux Nation First Nations Primary Care Centre in Merritt, Nuxálk Primary Care Centre, es zúmin’ Primary Care Centre and the MîÝoMâCihêwi Kamik Northern Nations Wellness Centre on Treaty 8 Territory.
Other centres in development are the Éyameth First Nations Primary Care Centre on Sts’ailes Territory as well as the Fraser West and Fraser South mobile medical units.
“The First Nations Health Authority values its partnerships with the Ministry of Health and First Nations Communities to increase access to culturally safe, team-based care province-wide,” said Dr. Terri Aldred, FNHA Medical Director for Primary Care. “We recognize more work needs to be done to achieve our vision of healthy, self-determining and vibrant First Nations children, families and communities in B.C., and we invite all health-system partners and municipalities in B.C. to support our shared journey towards a safe and sustainable health-care system.”
These centres will combine primary health care, social services and Indigenous health supports into teams that will provide culturally safe, person-first health-care services across the province. Service delivery in each centre will be unique and tailored to the needs of the communities it serves and will be operated in partnership with the local First Nations, FNHA and the Ministry of Health.
Recruitment for clinical and traditional roles is currently active in all regions of the province. Centres offering services in phases will offer limited services to begin with and provide more as positions are filled.
This expansion of First Nations-led primary care aligns with the Ministry of Health’s commitment to the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act to deliver services that are First Nations-led as well as informed by traditional wellness values and by the lived experiences of Indigenous Peoples.
Establishing these centres is part of the Province and FNHA’s First Nations-led Primary Health Care Initiative, which is intended to improve and increase access to culturally safe health services province-wide. This announcement builds on the 2019 opening of the Lu’ma Medical Centre in Vancouver, the 2022 opening of the All Nations Healing House in Williams Lake and the ground-breaking ceremony at Éyameth, formerly the Sts’ailes Community Care Campus, in Harrison Mills.
Learn More:
To learn more about recruitment, interested applicants can find positions listed here: https://workwithus.fnha.ca/
To learn more about the First Nations Primary Care Initiative: First Nations-led Primary Health Care Initiative – YouTube
To learn about Lu’ma Medical Centre, B.C.’s first FNPCC, visit: https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2019HLTH0129-001783
To read more about the All Nations Healing House in Williams Lake, visit: https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2022HLTH0217-001657
To see and learn more about the All Nations Healing House, visit: https://youtu.be/ZDTHmbeMFbE
To learn more about Éyameth, visit: https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2023HLTH0025-000345
To learn about actions underway for the 24 recommendations from In Plain Sight, visit: https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2021HLTH0075-002294
To learn more about the Province’s Primary Care Strategy, visit: https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/health/accessing-health-care/bcs-primary-care-system
Two backgrounders follow.
What people are saying about the expansion of First Nations-led primary care in B.C.
Lisa Montgomery-Reid, vice-president, regional operations, Interior Region –
“The vision for the Interior Region is to establish primary health care and wellness practices grounded in the culture, language and traditions of our Nations. It is the Nation’s vision and direction that guide every aspect of this work. This is the standard of care our People deserve—safe spaces for the People and by the People.”
Julie Morrison, vice-president, regional operations, North Region –
“This initiative gives us the opportunity to embed culture, Ceremony and traditional practices into the delivery of primary care services, as well as address disparities that exist within B.C.’s health-care system. By making delivery of health services community-driven and Nation-based, we are creating a safe and respectful environment for People to seek the timely care they need here in the North and in all regions of B.C.”
Kim Brooks, vice-president, regional operations, Vancouver Coastal Region –
“Improving access to culturally safe primary care services has been a long-held vision and goal of First Nations in the Vancouver Coastal Region. We are honoured to work in partnership with First Nations who have tirelessly led the planning, design and implementation of these new services, ensuring that their cultural practices and ways of being are the foundation of wholistic health care in community.”
Naomi Williams, vice-president, regional operations, Fraser Salish Region –
“Grounded in letse’mot, with ‘everyone working together’ our Primary Health Care vision is to ensure everyone living in Fraser Salish Region has access to a person-centered experience of care that is wholistic, integrated, coordinated, accessible, and where diversity, spirit, tradition, community and culture are respected. Éyameth has set a solid foundation for ensuring culture and tradition guides transformation of primary health care in the region and we look forward to how it will inform the 13 new facilities coming to communities throughout the province.”
Brennan MacDonald, vice-president, regional operations, Vancouver Island Region –
“Together with the Coast Salish, Kwakwaka’wakw and the Nuu-chah-nulth Nations, we have developed primary care services focusing on quality care that respects the cultural values, beliefs and practices of our Island Nations. This new network of care is First Nations-led, focuses on wellness and is accessible close to home for First Nations Peoples across Vancouver Island. As we move forward, we remain committed to working in partnership with each Nation to address the health service improvements that are needed for our communities.”
More information about the new First Nations primary care centres
First Nations Primary Care Centres (FNPCC) will be welcoming patients in the fall of 2024:
Vancouver Coastal Region
es zúmin’ Primary Care Centre
Nuxálk Primary Care Centre
Interior Region
northern St’át’imc Primary Care Center
Nlaka’pamux Nation First Nations Primary Care Centre
Northern Region
Gitxsan-Wet’suwet’en Primary Health Care Centre
MîÝoMâCihêwi Kamik Northern Nations Wellness Centre
Dadzi Wellness Centre
Vancouver Island Region
Coast Salish First Nations Primary Care Centre
Kwakwaka’waka First Nations Primary Care Centre
Nuu-chah-nulth First Nations Primary Care Centre
First Nations Primary Care Centres (FNPCC) in development:
Fraser Salish Region
Fraser West First Nations Primary Care Centre
Fraser South First Nations Primary Care Centre
Éyameth First Nations Primary Care Centre
Already established First Nations Primary Care Centres:
Vancouver Coastal Region
Lu’ma Medical Centre
Interior Region
All Nations Healing House
Media Contacts:
First Nations Health Authority
Media Relations
604 329-9544
media@fnha.ca
Ministry of Health
Media Relations
250 952-1887
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