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Videos
This project and accompanying evaluation serve as an exemplar for integrating Traditional Medicine/Healing into CSC’s Health Services model.
The purpose of the current study was to conduct a scan of justice-related data being collected by legal organizations and non-legal organizations in Saskatchewan, particularly in the domains of civil and family law, to better understand the nature of the data being collected, the accessibility of that data for data sharing purposes, and how amenable agencies in Saskatchewan are to establishing a justice data commons in the province.
Two survey instruments, broadly referred to as the 2021-2022 Saskatchewan Legal Needs Survey, were designed to assess Saskatchewan communities’ legal needs and accesses to justice issues from the perspective of those who provide justice-related support and services (i.e., lawyers and representatives of community-based organizations). Taken together, the primary focus of this report was to present and discuss findings from Saskatchewan’s 2021-2022 Legal Needs Survey.
īkwēskīcik iskwēwak is a program designed to support women in SK who are repeatedly incarcerated for low-level offences. Women with repeated criminal justice system involvement are offered up to 18 months of support to address their unique and often complex needs by building supportive transitional pathways to improve their community reintegration. The program is funded by the Saskatchewan Ministries of Corrections, Policing and Public Safety (CPPS), Justice and Attorney General, and Health and delivered by the Saskatoon Tribal Council.
This 4-minute video was conceptualized by the Inmate Welfare Committee at the Saskatchewan Regional Psychiatric Centre (RPC) in partnership with the PAWSitive Connections Lab (www.PAWSitiveConnectionsLab.com). In this engaging and heartwarming video, our PAWSitive Support therapy dogs—Molly (Bulldog and narrator), E-Jay (Boxer), Reacher (Black Lab), Reina (Yellow Lab), and Ruby (Chocolate Lab)—take you on a journey to explore: Patient-Oriented Research in practice The benefits of patients working alongside therapy dogs to build connections How patients want to focus on community reintegration What patients want everyone to know about POR, including the need to develop trusting connections, how dogs work to build a sense of community, and that incarcerated individuals are interested in change. The video showcases the collaborative efforts of RPC patients and staff, the PAWSitive Support Canine-Assisted Learning Program, and various esteemed institutions, including the University of Saskatchewan, Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care, and more.