Resources

Past Presentation

Aunties Are A Game Changer: How Indigenous Love Heals Historical Trauma | April 23, 2024

Date of Presentation: April 23, 2024

Type: Past Presentation  

Audience: Clinical  

Program: Care and Access for Pregnant People  

Keywords: #birthing  #pregnancy  #prenatal care  

In this series of presentations, we welcome speaker Camie Jae Goldhammer, MSW, LICSW, IBCLC, Sisíthuŋwaŋ-Waȟpéthuŋwaŋ Oyáte. Camie shares how aunties are game changers, how indigenous love heals historical trauma, and the story of Hummingbird Indigenous Family Services. Camie describes Indigenous birthing practices and how these can be incorporated to improve birth outcomes, identifies barriers that prevent Indigenous women from receiving high quality and culturally appropriate maternal care, and shares how to implement best practices to include AI/AN cultural birthing practices when providing maternal care. The new Care and Access for Pregnant People ECHO Program includes an opportunity to engage in a didactic presentation, gain insight on how I/T/U facilities may effectively integrate timely pregnancy care, and become part of a learning community.

Recording:

Presented by:

Camie Jae Goldhammer
MSW, LICSW, IBCLC (Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyaté)

Camie Goldhammer, MSW, LICSW, IBCLC (Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyaté) is a devoted leader for Indigenous families locally and nationally. She brings joy into all the work that she does and creates community and care in all her relationships. From starting grassroots community milk donation drives for families in her neighborhood, to holding lactation support circles in her living room, and bringing strangers random acts of kindness for her birthday, Camie is generous, warm-hearted, and a treasure to those who know her. Camie is the first in several generations to reclaim the traditional practice of breastfeeding. She is held by the love of her ancestors and the support of her community in pursuing a vision of increasing breast/chestfeeding and decreasing maternal and infant mortality in Native and Pacific Islander communities nationally. She, along with her “breastfriend” Kimberly Moore-Salas (Diné) created the first and only lactation counselor training created by Native people for Native communities and addresses the role that Historical Trauma (HT) and colonization have played in interrupting this traditional practice. Camie and Kim have trained over 550 Indigenous Lactation Counselors or Indigi-LCs across TurtleIsland. In November 2018 Camie along with Kimberly were the first NativeAmericans to be elected to the United States Breastfeeding Committee Board of Directors. Both were reelected for a second term in the fall of 2020. Camie has spent nearly 20 years serving urban Native families. She started the Native American Breastfeeding Coalition of Washington, the National Association of Professional and Peer Lactation Consultants of Color and was a member of the Center forSocial Inclusion’s First Food Racial Equity cohort. In 2013 she became Washington state’s first Native American Internationally Board Certified Lactation Consultant. She worked as a Campaign Director with MomsRising working to bring paid family and medical leave to Washington State which was signed into law in July 2017. Starting in 2014, Camie worked with CHAMPS/CHEER to make all hospitals in Mississippi and the Indian Health Service Baby Friendly. In April 2021 she left her role as Program Manager for United Indians of All Tribes’ Daybreak Star Doulas (which she also developed) and Our Strong Fathers to start Hummingbird Indigenous Family Services as its Founding Executive Director. She is a national leader on topics of racial equity, birth and breastfeeding reclamation and first food justice. When she isn’t working tirelessly for her communities, you can find Camie spending time with her family, listening to podcasts on cults, or at Disneyland. She lives in South Seattle with her husband Eric, two daughters Dylan (15) and JoJo (12), and dog Memphis. She has an amazing earring and breastfeeding t-shirt collection. Every year for breastfeeding awareness month, she wears a different t-shirt every day and posts a new fact about milk and breast/chest feeding. Taught by her Unči (Grandma), Camie has a love of sewing, especially quilting. She makes Halloween costumes for her daughters every year from scratch, and traditional star quilts for community members. She carries on the legacy of her grandmother through these practices.

CDR Tina Pattara-Lau
CDR Tina Pattara-Lau
Lead Faculty

CDR Tina Pattara-Lau, MD, FACOG, is the Maternal and Child Health Consultant with the IHS Office of Clinical and Preventive Services. In this role, she serves as subject matter expert, develops national programs and policies, and collaborates with federal and community resources to optimize patient access to quality care. She began her IHS career in 2015 as an OB/GYN at Phoenix Indian Medical Center, Parker and Peach Springs Indian Health Centers, and Valleywise Health Medical Center. During the COVID-19 pandemic she developed modified guidelines for OB/GYN care including delivery of telehealth prenatal care, vaccine education for patients, and multidisciplinary simulation training for Obstetric Readiness in the Emergency Department.

Tina graduated from the University of California, Berkeley with degrees in Molecular and Cell Biology and Psychology. She commissioned into the US Public Health Service in 2007 and received her medical degree from the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in 2011. She completed her OB/GYN residency at the Naval Medical Center, San Diego, is board certified, and a fellow of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists

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Resources Provided:

Date added: April 22, 2024