Each day will feature several block sessions spread throughout the day: an opening keynote, various breakout and plenary sessions, and opportunities to eat and connect with your community of peers. The most up-to-date agenda will be available in the conference app. Stay tuned for details on how to download and use the app.
Also, click below for visual At-a-Glance Agendas for each day of ONOJ 2023!
9:00 am
Camie will discuss intergenerational trauma and how it affects parenting practices specifically breastfeeding in Native communities.
11:00 am
In this workshop Seven Directions will present a tribal opioid overdose prevention care coordination framework that was developed based on key informant interviews, literature review, lessons learned from technical assistance with tribes and the national Opioid Technical Advisory Group’ guidance.
1:00 pm
We present preliminary findings from our study of the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on the physical, psychosocial, and economic wellbeing of Pacific Islanders (PI) in WA. We provide quantitative data on Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders (NHPI), as well as qualitative data from focus groups with specific ethnic PI communities (Fijian, Micronesian, Tongan, Samoan) and Pacific Island youth that illustrate both the stressors and roads to recovery for the PI communities in WA.
5:00 pm
A StorySlam is a live storytelling competition where stories are told, not read. You will have four minutes to tell a story. Judges will select winners based on creativity and time. First prize winner will receive a blanket from the Eighth Generation. The event will be hosted by Amber McCrary (Diné), MFA and Chael Moore (Diné).
9:00 am
Keynote by Lisa Pivec, Senior Director of Public Health for Cherokee Nation Health Services
11:00 am
This presentation focused on an emerging Indigenous performance management model and its application within the context of the pandemic.
1:00 pm
This presentation discussed the key role that peers, sometimes known as Peer Recovery Support Specialists, play in opioid overdose prevention and recovery support.
5:00 pm
We will be doing a breath centered yoga practice that will offer adaptations to make it accessible for your body.
9:00 am
Dr. Michele Suina - Albuquerque Area Southwest Tribal Epidemiology Center
11:00 am
This presentation will look at the Alaska Tribal Health Network, and online system we developed to address the ongoing challenge to track health services all over Alaska.
1:00 pm
This presentation will provide an overview of the Northwest Tribal Epidemiology Center’s use of data to monitor COVID-19 and the behavioral health impacts of the pandemic for AI/AN communities in Oregon and Washington. We will provide an overview of the data sources and indicators being monitored, the development of data dashboards to communicate findings, and an overview of key findings to date.
5:00 pm
This session aims to guide participants to reflect on their holistic wellness in spite of a chaotic and oppressive external world. Using one of the Seven Direction principles, participants will discuss collective grounding techniques, and learn about ways to use holistic wellness as a powerful tool in advocating for collective wellness, increased health outcomes, and combating political chaos.
9:00 am
Professor Tsosie will discuss the challenges of Indigenous data sovereignty during the current pandemic, highlighting the need for new structures of governance to respond to the needs of tribal governments and their citizens.
11:00 am
This presentation highlights important areas of concern related to the opioid crisis in Indian Country and the tragic increase in opioid overdoses and deaths in Arizona.
1:00 pm
Transforming health governance lies at the interface between cultural and political sovereignty, and a community-centered approach to governing based on nation building principles. This interactive workshop aims to 1) describe an approach to strengthening self-determination through health governance; 2) discuss the importance of tribal public health authority; and 3) highlight practical strategies for engaging leadership and key stakeholders in building legal competency.
5:00 pm
Mikayla will provide workshop participants with an overview of the critical history of the power of protest art in the Civil Rights, Red Power and American Indian Movements
Seven Directions
University of Washington
Center for the Study of Health & Risk Behaviors
Box 357238
Seattle, WA 98195-7238