Holly Prince, First Nations
Holly Prince is an Anishinaabekwe and a member of Opwaaganisiniing in Northwestern Ontario. She has a Master’s Degree in Social Work and is a Ph.D. Candidate in Educational Studies at Lakehead University. She works as a Project Manager at the Centre for Education and Research on Aging & Health at Lakehead University, where she is responsible for the planning, implementation, and evaluation of palliative care education initiatives for Indigenous communities across Canada. Holly’s areas of research focus is on decolonial and Indigenist education and Indigenous health and community-based research. Her work focuses on improving end-of-life care in Indigenous communities.
Tell us what you think of living my culture!
Click Here- Building on strengths in communities (1:39)
- Medication and pain control in remote communities (2:25)
- Discharging a patient for care at home (3:42)
- Collaboration between community and health systems (1:41)
- Making decisions about treatment and leaving community (2:28)
- Care is a community responsibility (1:40)
- Grief and Indigenous healthcare providers (1:26)
- Holly Prince (1:08)
- Building trusting relationships (1:46)
- Supporting families during dying (0:57)
- Holly Prince (2:07)
- Trust, respect and honest communication (1:13)
- Adapting language about palliative care (3:16)
- Practicing true person-centred care (1:09)
- Humility and respect: Building a relationship with families (2:29)
- Providing culturally safe care (1:44)
- How communities rally when someone is ill (1:09)
- Validating caregiving in First Nations communities (2:06)
- The goal of providing care in communities (1:01)
- Quality care recognizes extended families (3:10)
- Understanding advance care planning (1:40)
- Cultural humility (1:46)
- Limitations of cultural safety in the health system (1:03)
- Ensuring Indigneous Peoples' voices are heard (0:31)
- Sisters' last visit (1:57)
- The support of extended families: A personal story (1:57)
- Supporting connection and guiding healing (2:01)
- Recognizing the weight of cumulative grief (2:40)
- Grieving in the midst of crisis (2:58)
- An invitation to healing (2:28)
- Creation Stories can serve as guides for grief (2:36)
- Colonization, grief and resilience (1:48)
- The ongoing impacts of colonization (2:44)
- Re-claiming teachings can help us heal (3:00)
- Spirit first: Finding a path through grief (1:24)
- Healing for future generations (2:02)
- Supporting grief through re-claiming our teachings (2:17)
- Tools and teachings for grief and healing (2:32)
- Indigenous Voices: Walking with Our Elders - Grief and Healing in Later Life (80:19)
- Indigenous Voices: Grief and unexpected death and stigmatized losses (86:17)
- Indigenous Voices: The Power of Emotional Release (79:07)
- Indigenous Voices: Indigenous Ceremonies and Practices for Individuals Journeying to the Spirit World (87:29)
- Indigenous Voices: Indigenous Perspectives on the Connections Between Birth and Death (86:45)
- Indigenous Voices: Supporting Healthy Ways of Living through Grief and Loss (89:50)
- Indigenous Voices: Bringing Care Back to the Community (87:52)
- Indigenous Voices: Addressing Racism within the Canadian Healthcare System (86:18)


