Parry Sound hospice aims to offer culture-based care to nearby First Nations - Action News
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Parry Sound hospice aims to offer culture-based care to nearby First Nations

A hospice agency in central Ontario is reaching out to nearby First Nations to offer more culturally relevant services to patients and families seeking end-of-life care.

Hospice West Parry Sound serves 4 First Nations in central Ontario

Executive director Melanie Honsinger (left) and staff member Eva-Jane Poytress (right) are with Hospice West Parry Sound. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

A hospice agency in central Ontario is reaching out to nearby First Nations to offer more culturally relevant services to patients and families seeking end-of-life care.

Hospice West Parry Soundhas spent most of 2017building bridges between its volunteers, health care providers, and the Anishinaabe communities around the town of Parry Sound. It's a visiting hospice thatsupports people whose wish is to die at home.

"We have four First Nations within our catchment, so that amounts to around 1,000 individuals," said executive director Melanie Honsinger.

"So some of the things that we noticed was that the supports that Indigenous, First Nations people were asking of us were very different from the non-Indigenous (community)."

Parry Sound hospice Indigenous outreach

To identify those needs, hospice staff held workshops at the Parry Sound Friendship Centre in the spring to invite people and leaders from neighbouringcommunities like WasauksingFirst Nation and Shawanaga First Nation to share what they're looking for in hospice care.

"Generally speaking, Indigenous families rally around. They weren't looking for the caregiver breaks in the way that non-Indigenous were," said Honsinger.

Respecting traditional beliefs

"So our role, we've noticed, was much more in an advocacy role: to meet with physicians, nurses, and really advocate for incorporating and respecting traditional beliefs and values, traditional medicines, as well as just being the support to the family towardthe end of life."

Hospice West Parry Sound clients are able to use the Healing Room at the West Parry Sound Health Centre for smudge ceremonies. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

So far this year, Hospice West Parry Soundhasserved 10Indigenous families both on- and off-reserve, which amounts to about five per cent of its clientele. But staffexpect that number to grow.

"I think it's a big step given the amount of Indigenous communities we have, and the population we have, and the aging population, that this is a very important role," said Eva-Jane Poytress, hospice bookkeeper and administrative assistant from nearby Wasauksing.

"[The] hospice is learning our traditions and our culture, like how it is to make a spirit journey and have a sacred fire and the teachings of our medicines."

'Our web is getting bigger'

That meant a lot to Anita Chechockwhen she was seeingafriend through her final stages with cancer. Hospice volunteers helped co-ordinate supportwith health care providers according to Anishinaabecustoms.

"It's so good when you have your ways, your beliefs, and you can especially at that time of your life, end of life journey that you know that those things are in place," said Chechock, who's from Wasauksing.

Wasauksing First Nation member Anita Chechock calls the hospice's recent outreach efforts 'very important.' (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

"So when the staff realizes that, and is aware of those things those ceremonies, the idea of smudging, the importance of it, the importance of us being able to look afterour loved ones very, very important."

Along with being more sensitive to Anishinaabepractices around death, Honsinger wants to make the hospice more inclusive by recruiting more Indigenous volunteers to its team "to create something that makes sense for our community."

"Our web is getting bigger," added Poytress. "And I would like us to be shown as a model, that we're willing, and the bridges that we are building."