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Keynote speaker
Josephine Etowa
PhD, RN, RM, FWACN, FAAN
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Dr Josephine Etowa is a Full Professor & past chair of the Loyer-DaSilva Research in Public Health Nursing and OHTN in Black Women’s HIV Prevention and care at the School of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa. She is a past president of the Health Association of African Canadians. Her research focuses on inequities in health and healthcare with emphasis on women’s health, perinatal health, HIV/AIDS, nurses’ worklife, community health nursing and the health of African, Caribbean, and Black (ACB) Canadians.
She is a community-engaged scholar with extensive projects on inequities in health and healthcare including perinatal health, COVID-19, HIV/AIDS, nurses’ work life, community health nursing, and the health of African, Caribbean, and Black (ACB) Canadians. Her research studies are informed by an intersectionality lens and Community Based Participatory Research (CBPR) approach. Her research projects have been funded by international, national, provincial and local agencies and these projects are guided by the tenets of qualitative research and participatory action research (PAR). In an effort to explicate the complexities of the social realities often embedded in nursing research, she also uses mixed research methods including integration of both quantitative and qualitative approaches.
Her employment history spans across international boundaries and as a registered nurse (RN), a midwife, a lactation consultant, a researcher and an educator, Dr Etowa has worked in various capacities within the Canadian health care system. Before her appointment as a professor at University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Health Sciences, School of Nursing, she worked as an Associate Professor of Nursing at Dalhousie University’s Faculty of Health Professions. She holds an honorary appointment with the IWK Health Centre, Halifax Nova Scotia.
Dr Etowa urges everyone to continue to engage in the important work of dismantling anti-Black and structural racism all year round. Engaging in anti-racism work happens every day, not only in February, so she and her team will continue to engage in and advocate for anti-racism research, practice and policies especially in Ottawa where the population of ACB people is growing at a fast rate. She is a transformational leader in health equity, antiracism, and community empowerment research within Canada and internationally.