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An innovative health organization is seeking a passionate Nurse Practitioner to provide culturally safe primary care services to First Nations communities. This role emphasizes collaboration within a team-based environment, integrating traditional wellness practices with Western medicine. You'll be responsible for managing a client panel and ensuring holistic care that respects the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual aspects of health. Join a transformative initiative aimed at improving health outcomes for First Nations people while making a meaningful impact in their lives. This is a unique opportunity to contribute to a culturally rich and supportive environment.
NURSE PRACTITIONER - n.St'at'imc Primary Care Centre
The First Nations Health Authority is a diverse and transformational health organization of professional, innovative, and dedicated team members and leaders.
The first of its kind in Canada, FNHA works as a health-and-wellness partner with BC First Nations to support self-determination and decision-making to improve health outcomes.
Nurse Practitioner (NP) Family
n.St'at'imc (Lillooet & area)
$171,533-$182,968 pro-rated for partial FTE plus completions incentive
Contract up to a 1.0 FTE-typically 1680 hours a year
The First Nations-led Primary Care Initiative (FNPCI) aims to improve access to primary health-care services for First Nations people across BC in a way that is culturally safe and closer to home. The FNPCI is part of the province’s primary care strategy, which is integrating team-based care in communities throughout B.C. and changing the way primary care is delivered with the creation of primary care networks in partnership with the Regional Health Authorities.
In order to meet the health and wellness needs of First Nations people, it is very important that primary care is culturally safe and culturally informed where Indigenous ways of knowing and being are woven into services.
One of the main objectives of the FNPCI is to develop new First Nations Primary Health Care Centres in rural and urban locations across the province. The centres will provide access to quality primary health care services for First Nations people and their families. The aim is for clients to feel safe, welcomed, valued, respected and heard when they access care services at one of these centres.
The n.St’át’imc Primary Care Centre (PCC), based out of Lillooet, will provide culturally safe, trauma-informed primary care services to members of six northern St’át’imc First Nation’s Communities: Tsal?a´lh, Sekw?el?wa´s, T?i´t?q?et, Xwísten, Ts?kw?aylaxw and Xaxlip. The northern St’át’imc PCC will provide holistic care for First Nations people and their families, incorporating First Nations ways of knowing and weaving together Western medicine and Traditional Wellness practices.
The n.St’át’imc PCC will begin operating out of the current FNHA Nursing Clinic in Lillooet. The current location includes nursing outreach services to each of the six Communities, and the space will be shared between the primary care team and the nursing team.
Services will be designed to provide wraparound, team-based primary care, mental health, and traditional wellness services. The centre will provide safe spaces for First Nations people and their families seeking high-quality primary care services. It is expected that the centre will initially operate Monday to Friday (excluding Statutory Holidays) during regular business hours (this may change over time due to operational needs).
The Nurse Practitioners (NPs) will be the most responsible provider for a client panel as described in the NP clinical service contract template. NPs are expected to collaborate within a team-based environment that supports the practice of Western and Traditional Wellness approaches to client health and wellness. A minimum panel size is typically expected to reach 600 patients per 1.0 FTE by year 3 and will be confirmed in the clinical service contract. The Nurse Practitioner will be expected to travel with the team on Fridays to different sites to be available for appointments within the Communities.
Compensation is detailed within the contract and aligns with provincial norms, which are revised from time to time. NPs are not required to contribute to clinic overhead.
The Nurse Practitioner will be responsible for practicing with cultural humility, to provide primary care in a culturally safe, team-based environment that recognizes the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual aspects of the client (and family) to provide whole-person care, in compliance with policies and procedures of acceptable BC health and wellness regulations and standards.
The First Nations Health Authority is committed to respecting diversity within our workforce; preference will be given to individuals who identify as First Nations, Inuit, or Métis.
First Nations Health Authority is a first of its kind in Canada and joining our family means being part of a collaborative, diverse and compassionate organization committed to innovating, transforming and redesigning health service delivery for First Nations communities in BC. Leading with culture, all FNHA medical staff are encouraged to continue with their cultural safety and humility learning and engagement activities. A range of relevant courses are available to medical staff who will complete at least one within the first year of joining FNHA.
If this sounds like the opportunity for you, please email medical.affairs@fnha.ca.
Anticipated Hire Date: Summer 2025
For more information about us, please visit: www.fnha.ca/about/work-with-us
If you have any inquiries or issues please contact Medical Affairs at medical.affairs@fnha.ca
For information about Cultural Safety and Humility (fnha.ca) and for information about Land Acknowledgements
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