Mind The Disruption  By  cover art

Mind The Disruption

By: National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health
  • Summary

  • Mind the Disruption is a show about people who refuse to accept things as they are. It's about people pushing for better health for all. It's about people like us who have a deep desire to build a healthier, more just world. Season 1 out now! Brought to you by the National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health Hosted by Bernice Yanful Created and produced by Rebecca Cheff, Carolina Jimenez, and Bernice Yanful Coordination of communications, webpage development and dissemination by Caralyn Vossen Technical production and original music by Chris Perry Artwork by comet art + design Special thanks to Claire Betker and the rest of the NCCDH team The National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health is hosted by St. Francis Xavier University. We are located in Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq people. Visit our website to learn more about our podcast and what we do: https://nccdh.ca/learn/podcast/ This podcast is made possible through a financial contribution from the Public Health Agency of Canada through funding for the NCCDH. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the views of the Public Health Agency of Canada. Established in 2005, the NCCDH is one of the six National Collaborating Centres (NCCs) for Public Health that work together to promote the use of scientific research and other knowledge to strengthen public health practices, programs and policies in Canada. For more information, visit the NCCPH website.
    2022 NCCDH
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Episodes
  • Disrupting for Health Care for All
    Apr 23 2024

    Check out this episode to learn from Chloé Cébron and Shezeen Suleman who are part of a growing movement mobilizing for the right to health care for all people living in Canada, regardless of immigration status. In this episode, Chloé, the director of policy and advocacy at Médecins du Monde, shares lessons from a successful advocacy campaign to expand health care coverage for all children living in Quebec. Then Shezeen, a midwife and co-chair of the Health Network for Uninsured Clients in Toronto, reflects on using advocacy as a strategy for health equity.

    (00:00) Introduction

    (6:44) Interview with Chloé Cébron

    (40:04) Interview with Shezeen Suleman

    Episode Guests: Chloé Cébron is a lawyer in international humanitarian law and human rights and the director of policy and advocacy at Médecins du Monde Canada. For nearly 15 years, she has worked for humanitarian health organizations as a legal, policy and advocacy advisor in a dozen countries. Since 2017, she has been working for Médecins du Monde Canada and coordinates the organization’s advocacy on access to health care for migrants with precarious status in Canada. Shezeen Suleman is a midwife in Toronto, co-leading the MATCH program at the South Riverdale Community Health Centre. She has worked as a midwife in the city for over 10 years and before this worked as a youth worker in neighborhoods across the city; these roots in community work inform her practice as a midwife. Shezeen also co-chairs the Health Network for Uninsured Clients in the GTA, aiming to create and maintain dignified pathways to care for people living without OHIP.

    Learn more:

    Precarious immigration status, precarious health: Working together to ensure healthcare for all women living in Quebec (MdM, 2023)

    Bill 83: Implementation & Information (MdM, 2021)

    Health Network for Uninsured Clients resources & report (HNUC, 2023)

    Let’s Talk: Advocacy & health equity (NCCDH, 2015)

    Does public health advocacy seek to redress health inequities? A scoping review (Cohen & Marshall, 2017)

    Disrupting Migrant Work [Season 1, Episode 4] (NCCDH, 2023)

    Episode Credits: Production for this episode was led by Rebecca Cheff, with contributions from Carolina Jimenez, Pemma Muzumdar and host Bernice Yanful. The Mind the Disruption project team is led by Rebecca Cheff, with technical production and original music by Chris Perry. Promotion by Caralyn Vossen. Artwork by comet art + design. Mind the Disruption is a podcast by the National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health. NCCDH is hosted by St. Francis Xavier University and funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of PHAC.

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    59 mins
  • Disrupting for Racial & Climate Justice
    Mar 26 2024

    As Director of the Community Climate Resilience Lab, Dr. Imara Rolston recognizes that the climate crisis is a health emergency that will disproportionally impact racialized communities. Listen to this episode to hear how Imara and his team are bringing together non-profit leaders, grassroots leaders, academics, and policy makers and creating a Toronto-focused Racial Justice Climate Resilience framework. Through this work, they are supporting cites to reckon with historical slavery and colonialism and integrate community-driven solutions. Community outreach worker Diana Chan McNally then reflects on opportunities for public health to improve community engagement efforts.

    (00:00) Introduction

    (8:09) Interview with Imara Rolston

    (40:49) Interview with Diana Chan McNally

    Episode Guests: Dr. Imara Ajani Rolston is a social psychologist, policy maker, and Associate Professor and director of the Community Climate Resilience Lab at the University of Toronto’s Dalla Lana School of Public Health. Dr. Rolston has contributed to research and publications in the areas of HIV/AIDS, health promotion and community development and has advanced racial justice and urban responses to climate change with the City of Toronto. He has over 15 years of experience working across Sub-Saharan Africa with organizations including the Stephen Lewis Foundation, Oxfam Canada, and Greenpeace Africa. Reflective guest Diana Chan McNally (Dipl. CW, BFA, MA, MEd) is a frontline worker supporting unhoused people in Toronto's downtown east side. As someone with lived experience of social services and homelessness, her work focuses on human rights and equity issues for people without housing, and particularly encampments. She is an alumnus of Maytree Canada and a fellow of the McNally Project for Paramedicine Research.

    Learn more:

    • Climate Change Resilience Part 2: Public health roles and actions (NCCDH, 2021)
    • Keeping It Political and Powerful: Defining the Structural Determinants of Health (Heller et al., 2024)
    • Let’s Talk series: Community Engagement, Racism, and Whiteness (NCCDH)

    Episode Credits: Production for this episode was led by Pemma Muzumdar and host Bernice Yanful, with contributions from Rebecca Cheff and Carolina Jimenez (NCCDH). The Mind the Disruption project team is led by Rebecca Cheff, with technical production and original music by Chris Perry. Promotion by Caralyn Vossen (NCCDH). Artwork by comet art + design. Sound credit: "Central Park Ambience.aif" by logancircle2 is licensed under CC BY 4.0. Mind the Disruption is a podcast by the National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health. NCCDH is hosted by St. Francis Xavier University and funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of the PHAC.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Disrupting for Disability Without Poverty
    Mar 12 2024

    Transcript (PDF or download Word document)

    As the National Director of Disability Without Poverty, Rabia Khedr is building a vibrant intersectional movement led by people with disabilities to end disability poverty through a new federal Canada Disability Benefit. Listen to this episode to learn from Rabia about why this benefit is so necessary and what is still needed to deliver meaningful change. Jonathan Heller, a visiting scholar at the National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health, then shares practical strategies that public health can use to build community power and support movements like Disability Without Poverty.

    (00:00) Introduction

    (6:49) Interview with Rabia Khedr

    (40:46) Interview with Jonathan Heller

    Episode Guests: Rabia Khedr is dedicated to equity and justice for persons with disabilities, women, and diverse communities. She is the National Director of Disability Without Poverty and CEO of DEEN Support Services. A founder of Race and Disability Canada, she is also a board member of the Muslim Council of Peel and the Federation of Muslim Women. Rabia draws on her lived experience of being blind and advocating for siblings with intellectual disabilities. Reflective guest Jonathan Heller (he/him) is a Visiting Scholar at the National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health and a Senior Health Equity Fellow at the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute. He is the co-founder and until 2020 was the co-director of Human Impact Partners, a US-based non-profit focused on bringing the power of public health to campaigns and movements for a just society.

    Learn more:

    • Disability Without Poverty
    • Let's Talk: Redistributing power to advance health equity (NCCDH, 2023)
    • Building community power for health equity: A curated list (NCCDH, 2023)

    Episode Credits: Production for this episode was led by Carolina Jimenez and Rebecca Cheff, with contributions from Pemma Muzumdar and host Bernice Yanful (NCCDH). The Mind the Disruption project team is led by Rebecca Cheff, with technical production and original music by Chris Perry. Promotion by Caralyn Vossen (NCCDH). Artwork by comet art + design. Sound credits: Clips used from Elisa, Jen Gammad, Hon. Carla Qualtrough, Michelle Hewitt and Where's the bill? Mind the Disruption is a podcast by the National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health. NCCDH is hosted by St. Francis Xavier University and funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of the PHAC.

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    58 mins

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