
For Lindsay Iron, community is everything. As one of this year’s Award of Excellence
in Nursing recipients, she is incredibly proud of what the award means, recognition
for working hard to make positive change in the northern communities she serves.
The Award of Excellence in Nursing, presented by Indigenous Services Canada, celebrates
the dedication, initiative and excellence of nurses employed by First Nations and
Inuit communities, as well as Indigenous Services Canada.
This fall Lindsay looks forward to becoming a graduate of the Collaborative Nurse Practitioner Program (CNPP) with a Master in Nursing, Nurse Practitioner degree from the University of Regina
and Saskatchewan Polytechnic. Lindsay has been serving communities in northern Saskatchewan
since graduating in 2011 with a Bachelor in Nursing degree from the First Nations
University of Canada and the University of Saskatchewan northern campus in Prince
Albert. As a young Indigenous mother with two children aged five and nine, Lindsay
balanced motherhood with career and educational responsibilities, pursuing advanced
practice certifications while working in a hospital setting.
Spending her first two years with the Prairie North Health Region, Lindsay gained
valuable experience as an Emergency Room and Advanced Practice Primary Care nurse.
But she longed to return to the North, and in 2013, she realized her dream by moving
North to on-reserve nursing. Her work is a true calling. As a communicable disease
nurse specialist, she was instrumental in increasing sexual health accessibility within
remote locations, introducing harm reduction services, and initiating laboratory services
where they did not previously exist.
Growing up as a member of the Canoe Lake Cree First Nation on Treaty 10 Territory
in Northern Saskatchewan, Lindsay has been fascinated with nursing since undergoing
surgery at a young age. She also witnessed the positive impact it had on the lives
of others through the experiences of a relative who was a nurse.
“I always found it captivating and exciting and had it set in my mind at a very young
age that I wanted to be a nurse,” she said.
The northern, isolated communities where Lindsay works are rooted in culture, tradition,
and respect for the importance of family, and they embody a true spirit of belonging.
“It doesn’t matter which community I am in, I always feel the sense of community and
home,” said Lindsay. “First Nations people are funny, loving, welcoming, generous,
friendly, humorous and kind, and that’s what I feel from every northern community
I visit.”
Now the mother of four children, Lindsay appreciates the knowledge she gained from
the CNPP. “I am very grateful and very blessed to be able to have gone through this
program and to take what I learned and contribute back to First Nations people in
the North,” she said. “It expanded my thinking, broadened my scope, and filled huge
gaps in my knowledge base. I feel privileged to be able to put my new skills to use,
as this degree is not only valuable for me but for entire communities. The number
of people I can provide services to is immense.”
She added that “going North meant a lot of responsibility and independence, and it
was the perfect foundation for becoming a Nurse Practitioner. I knew one day I wanted
to be in a position where I could make impactful change. I strongly feel that Indigenous
nurses are strong leaders in communities, and we hold a sacred privilege as leaders.
It’s a real blessing to work on reserves; there is so much to gain.”
It wasn’t an easy road for Lindsay to follow. “It was very hard, with a ton of self-discipline
and many sacrifices, so I’ve grown a lot, and it has changed me for the better,” she
said. “I enjoy my role as a Nurse Practitioner student and the person I have become
in the process.”
The most gratifying aspect of nursing for Lindsay is interacting with patients, clients,
front-line nursing staff, and being engaged within a community.
Lindsay is overwhelmed with pride in receiving the Award of Excellence in Nursing.
“I have been working so hard the last few years, trying to make changes and make a
difference in the communities where I work. The sense of accomplishment and the race
to beat my personal goals drove me to do better than yesterday. To be rewarded for
hard work with this amazing recognition is just the cherry on top of my proud sense
of accomplishment.”
She is determined to achieve her ultimate goal of obtaining her PhD. And with her
drive, tenacity and community values, there’s no doubt she will achieve all her goals.
Along the way, she hopes to encourage more Indigenous women to accomplish anything
they set their hearts on. “If I can do it, trust me, so can you.”
For more information visit Celebrating Indigenous Nurses during National Nursing Week.
Learn more about the Collaborative Nurse Practitioner Program (CNPP).
Saskatchewan Polytechnic is signatory to the SDG Accord. Sustainable Development Goal alignment is one of the ways Sask Polytech is leading the rise of polytechnic education.