管家婆免费开奖大全

Race, health and happiness: 管家婆免费开奖大全 researcher launches well-being podcast focused on racialized groups

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The team behind the 鈥淩ace Health & Happiness鈥 podcast. Back row, from left to right: Semipe Oni, Bhavna Samtani and Obadiah George. Front row, from left to right: Onye Nnorom and Karl Kabasele (photo by Fran莽oise Makanda)

A new podcast hosted by a 管家婆免费开奖大全 researcher aims to help racialized people thrive and stay well.

The podcast, called 鈥淩ace Health & Happiness,鈥 is the brainchild of Onye Nnorom, who is a doctor and an assistant professor at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health and in the Faculty of Medicine鈥檚 department of family and community medicine.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not a podcast where we start explaining racism and if there is any in Canada,鈥 Nnorom says. 鈥淭he assumption is that the listener understands that. This podcast is like course 201. Now, we think about staying well, thriving and finding joy.

鈥淐entre stage is the Black, Indigenous and people of colour experience. It鈥檚 an opportunity to understand how groups have thrived and survived systemic racism. At its core, it鈥檚 how we overcome and enjoy despite life challenges.鈥

Upcoming episodes will feature guests like life coach Ritu Bhasin, former MP Celina Caesar-Chavannes and renowned film and music director Director X.

Nnorom got the idea from talking with students. She has always been vocal about the impact of racism on health, but discovered that racialized students wanted more.

鈥淭hey said, 鈥榃e understand what you say about racism and how it impacts people鈥檚 stress levels and how it鈥檚 incorporated into our institutions unintentionally 鈥 so how do we stay well from issues like microaggression, and understanding the lack of opportunities we may face?鈥欌 says Nnorom. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have the answer to that 鈥 yes, there is some research, but I think community wisdom is a critical part of that answer.鈥

Onye Nnorom (far right) interviews Director X (left) for her new podcast 鈥淩ace, Health & Happiness鈥 (photo by Fran莽oise Makanda)

Nnorom enlisted the help of other Dalla Lana alumni, staff and students like Dr. Karl Kabasele, Obadiah George and Semipe Oni and Bhavna Samtani to produce the podcast. In one of the first two available episodes, she explores the duality first-generation Canadians face coming from a culture that emphasizes community while entering a society that prefers individuality.

鈥淗ow do you stay true to yourself and your own value which might not always be the same as the dominant culture or the Canadian culture, and the second is how you find the middle ground where you don鈥檛 have to be performing or pretending to be something that you are not, but still be able to do well in this society and stay well,鈥 Nnorom says.

She sees commonalities in the ways her guests stay well, noting that they stress the importance of connection and community among all backgrounds.

鈥淔ind a community with people who are like you and those who are not like you to connect with. That鈥檚 the beauty of Canada. Even though there is a lot of isolation, especially in the way our Western culture is structured, lots of different cultures have a tradition of that kind of connectedness,鈥 says Nnorom.

Nnorom looked at various media options and settled on a podcast. Her hope is to reach students and their counterparts through a non-traditional medium that will allow her to delve into topics mainstream media may not entertain.

Although the podcast won鈥檛 explain racism, she hopes it will help all listeners understand the issues racialized people face.

鈥淧erhaps it will help people to understand that extra layer of challenges experienced by racialized people, so I hope that it creates some sort of understanding, or inspiration to become an ally.鈥

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