Cultural safety and humility

Our commitment

The time has come to stop the cycle of Indigenous-specific racism that is embedded in BC’s health-care system. Our mandate is to protect the safety of BC patients by ensuring physicians and surgeons meet expected standards of practice and conduct. As part of that mandate, we are committed to inviting the voice of Indigenous people into our governance structure and operations.

Where we are today

In March 2017, we signed the , alongside all health profession regulators, the Ministry of Health, and the First Nations Health Authority.

Since signing the declaration, we have taken steps to create, enable and sustain a climate for change by:

  • recognizing unceded territory in all formal regulatory proceedings
  • collecting data from registrants at annual licence renewal time regarding the completion of the and whether they identify as Indigenous (these numbers are then reported to the First Nations Health Authority)
  • requiring all board members, the senior leadership team, and employees who engage directly with the public to complete the
  • introducing a standard for registrants that explicitly addresses the requirement to provide culturally safe, humble, and responsive care

The ºÚÁÏÉç is located on the unceded and traditional territory of the Coast Salish peoples, including the territories of the hÉ™nÌ“qÌ“É™minÌ“É™mÌ“ speaking peoples―the xÊ·məθkÊ·É™yÌ“É™m (Musqueam) and sel̓ílÌ“witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, and the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh-ulh Sníchim speaking peoples―the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) Nation.

We acknowledge the rights and title of BC First Nations whose territories span across the province. These territories recognize that laws, governance, and health systems tied to lands and waters have existed here since time immemorial.

Priorities for future change

While we are proud of our actions so far, the In Plain Sight report (2020) into Indigenous-specific racism in BC’s health-care system revealed much more needs to be done. The report highlights the uncomfortable truth that racism and inequality are as prevalent as ever in our society.

We recognize we can do more and are focused on the following priorities:

  • actively reviewing our complaints process in order to make it more accessible to Indigenous people.
  • engaging in continuous training and educating ourselves and our board and committee members in cultural safety and humility, unconscious bias, and trauma-informed care
  • replacing the ºÚÁÏÉç crest, which is a distinctly colonial symbol, as part of a significant rebranding process
  • holding space for Indigenous membership on the ºÚÁÏÉç Board and committees
  • investing in supports to ensure a safe environment for Indigenous people engaging with the ºÚÁÏÉç

Practice standard

This standard sets out expectations for registrants to incorporate cultural safety and humility into their practice

Development process

We invited Indigenous registrants and patients to share their thoughts and feedback on the practice standard's development and implementation

Learn more

Public resource and videos

Watch videos on the six core concepts that formed the foundation for the practice standard

Related news

Date postedTitle
October 1, 2024Indigenous Cultural Safety, Cultural Humility and Anti-racism practice standard evaluation
September 30, 2024Statement on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
September 23, 2024Progress report on complaints process review recommendations
June 21, 2024National Indigenous Peoples Day
September 30, 2023Statement on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
July 27, 2023Complaints process review
June 21, 2023Dismantle Racism in Health Care: Two-year Update
September 30, 2022Statement on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
June 21, 2022ºÚÁÏÉç and BCCNM mark National Indigenous Peoples Day with video series to support culturally safe care
May 11, 2022Dismantle Racism in Health Care: First Anniversary Report from Health-system Leaders
January 11, 2022
September 30, 2021Statement on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
September 27, 2021Federation of Medical Regulatory Authorities of Canada statement on Indigenous-specific racism
June 1, 2021The ºÚÁÏÉç Board presents its 2021/22 strategic plan objectives
May 31, 2021Statement on remains found at former residential school
May 11, 2021Racism in Health Care: An Apology to Indigenous People and a Pledge to Be Anti-Racist
May 6, 2021Joint statement with FNHA on misleading COVID-19 information
November 30, 2020The ºÚÁÏÉç commits to addressing Indigenous-specific racism within health-care system
June 19, 2020Response to allegations of racism in the ER
June 9, 2020Standing up for all people: why silence on racism is not an option
Read the final reports on Indigenous-specific discrimination in BC health care
Read the National Inquiry's final report
Read Bill 41, which recognizes and protects the rights of Indigenous Peoples
Access FNHA's cultural safety and humility resources.