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Community intervention trials
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Bangladesh
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Capacity building
Projects
Canada: Anisnabe Kekendazone - Network Environment for Aboriginal Health Research (AK-NEAHR) [formerly ACADRE]
Canada: Cigarette use among Native Canadian youth in Winnipeg, Manitoba, 1995
Canada: First Nations Youth Inquiry into Tobacco Use, 1996
Canada: Local Public Health Infrastructure Development (LoPHID), 1998-2000
Canada: Problems of Urban Aboriginal Youth, 1996
Pakistan: Skills training in evidence-based planning, 2005
Pakistan: Social audit focus district scheme, 2004-2009
Southern Africa: A decision tool for the SADC countries on HIV/AIDS prevention
Southern Africa: building capacity for AIDS prevention trials
United States: Support to commuity organizations in North Brooklyn, 1998-99
United States: The CIET-El Puente Partnership, 1995-2003
Related Documents
Anisnabe Kekendazone - Network Environment for Aboriginal Health Research (AK-NEAHR) [formerly ACADRE]
 
The Anisnabe Kekendazone (original knowledge) Network Environment for Aboriginal Health Research (AK-NEAHR, formerly ACADRE) supports training of First Nations, Métis and Inuit health researchers through fellowships and seed grants at masters, doctoral and post-doctoral levels. The fund also helps First Nations, Métis and Inuit health researchers take part in national and international health research that is relevant to the well-being of Aboriginal communities and attuned to their worldview. Funded by the Canadian Institute of Health Research -Institute of Aboriginal People’s Health, nine NEARH centres form a national network that helps to increase the impact of Aboriginal health research in Canada. CIETcanada, partnered with 52 researchers from the Universities of Ottawa, Montréal, McGill, Carleton, Queen's and Alberta, and from several Aboriginal organizations across Canada, won a three-year renewable grant to run the AK-NEAHR until 2010.

As of November 2009, the AK-NEAHR had awarded 25 fellowships to First Nations, Métis and Inuit health researchers and had invested over $10 million in successful research grants.

An all-Aboriginal advisory board reviews all research proposals and decides on funding, with technical input from CIET and its academic partners. The board is made up of the five national Aboriginal organizations: Assembly of First Nations (AFN), Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP), Métis National Council (MNC), Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (ITK) and Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC).

The AK-NEAHR focuses on First Nations, Métis and Inuit health issues of national relevance, emphasizing primary prevention (building individual and community well-being and reducing the risk of health threats), evaluation of interventions, and translation of research findings for use by communities, policy makers and health services.  The centre also features research linking modern science and indigenous knowledge in fields ranging from traditional medicine to community-based resilience to sexual violence and HIV/AIDS. The AK-NEAHR also hosts the Inuit Institute for Research and Planning, the first Inuit-oriented academic effort of its kind in Canada. 

For more information on grants and fellowships, please visit the McGill-based administrating centre for the AK-NEAHR.

If you want to know more about ACADRE researchers and their experiences, please click here.