July 10, 2023
Academic journey connects head and heart for Bachelor of Health Sciences alumna
Nour Hassan, 鈥21, always saw herself working at the intersection of health and social justice. As a newcomer to Canada, she experienced barriers to health when her younger sister鈥檚 early symptoms were dismissed and she was subsequently diagnosed with brain cancer, months later.
Hassan had to learn to navigate the health system and advocate for her sister鈥檚 needs, who now lives with a permanent disability. This experience inspired Hassan, who majored in , to become a passionate advocate for marginalized immigrants and refugees, including the Yazidi community.
After suffering genocide, mass displacement, and enslavement by the Islamic State (Daesh) in 2014, many Yazidi refugees resettled in cities throughout the world, including in Calgary starting in 2017. Hassan's journey with the community in Calgary began in 2019 as part of her research practicum, when she joined , a clinician-led research program in the . Initially, she had no knowledge of the Yazidis or the experiences.
Sarah Welsh, left, and Nour Hassan try baking bread at the launch of the kitchen program.
Nour Hassan
"I hadn't heard about them, and the world had turned its eyes away," says Hassan. "My supervisor, Dr. Gabriel Fabreau, showed me how my research could help this vulnerable community who really wanted their story told.鈥
Hassan鈥檚 research focused on family reunification, the community鈥檚 number-one priority. As her knowledge of, and friendships within, the community grew, her practicum evolved into an honours thesis documenting the mental and physical health impacts of genocide. The paper is in JAMA Network Open.
"I was very lucky to collaborate with community leaders, including one Yazidi in Calgary and another still living in an internally displaced persons camp in Iraq," says Hassan.
"One of the biggest things I learned was that we must listen to the community, who are experts in their own experience. As a researcher, I wanted to ensure their voices were represented and their story, which has been forgotten, was accurately documented.鈥
Personal accounts, health records analyzed to improve care, help healing
The research required investigating years of information and health data of Yazidi patients at the in Calgary. With the help of the community and expert clinicians, the research was aimed at guiding health care and future resettlement planning for Yazidi refugees and other genocide victims.
鈥Though our methodology was simple and the output inefficient from a research perspective 鈥 it took us nearly four years to summarize the ordeals of 242 Yazidi genocide survivors 鈥 this stands among the research we are most proud of,鈥 says Fabreau, MD, assistant professor at the .
鈥淚t will certainly help clinicians care for other refugees and survivors of genocide, but more importantly, it is our gift to our Yazidi patients and the broader Yazidi community, and our first study motivated entirely by patients.鈥
NARHC Cleveland, from left: Linda Holdbrook, Gabriel Fabreau, Nour Hassan.
Nour Hassan
鈥淢ost importantly, this study originated from the Yazidis鈥 request to document the atrocities they endured so that the world never forgets,鈥 says Hassan.
鈥淚鈥檓 really proud of this work and hope it can help promote community healing and potentially serve as evidence to one day hold perpetrators accountable.鈥
While working on the paper, Hassan also looked for opportunities to interact with the Yazidi community and to educate others about their experience. She presented to students in the Faculty of Nursing who were working with the Yazidi community on a kitchen program. Hassan was also invited by the to deliver a of her work to educate health professionals in the settlement, social and health sectors about the unique needs of Yazidi refugees. Finally, she presented her research at multiple conferences including the (NARHC).
鈥淎s a physician and professor, one of the most powerful experiences we have is to watch a student, resident or trainee really thrive,鈥 says Fabreau. 鈥淲atching Nour deliver a national webinar to health professionals from across Canada as an undergraduate student was one of those moments.鈥
North American Refugee Conference comes to Calgary
Nour Hassan.
This year, Hassan will be a member of the audience when the conference comes to Calgary this month for the first time. Shortly after that she is on her way to Toronto to complete a Master of Public Health degree. She says the credential is important to advance her advocacy work and she isn鈥檛 wasting any time.
鈥淚鈥檝e joined the Board of Project Abraham, a non-profit organization supporting Yazidis and other traumatized refugees in Toronto. I am chairing the advocacy committee to help push for family reunification,鈥 says Hassan.
鈥淩esettled Yazidi refugees are still suffering from family separations, which is an ongoing trauma that harms their health and long-term recovery. It鈥檚 a topic I鈥檓 very passionate about and hope to be able to advance.鈥
The ongoing plight of the Yazidi community is one of the main topics at this month鈥檚 conference. Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, human rights activist, and leading advocate for survivors of genocide and sexual violence, , is the keynote speaker. She was a 19-year-old student living in northern Iraq when armed Islamic State fighters rounded up members in her village, killing many and enslaving others.
Refugee Health YYC and the O鈥橞rien Institute for Public Health are proudly co-hosting NARHC. You can still for the conference. You can also a student, trainee, health-care worker or refugee to attend.
Gabriel Fabreau is an associate professor in the departments of , and at the Cumming School of Medicine (CSM) and a member of the O鈥橞rien Institute for Public Health at the CSM.