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Between the 26 th and 30 th of September the traffic between Copenhagen, Kangerlussuaq — a small settlement in West Greenland and the only place with capacity for international flights — and the capital of Greenland, Nuuk, was intense. The airports were overcrowded. There were almost no seats available, and the small red planes, operating between Kangerlussuaq and Nuuk, were flying non-stop trying to service the extreme flow of outsiders travelling to Nuuk. Researchers, doctors, nurses, forensic medical specialists, psychiatrists, and policy makers were all traveling to Nuuk to attend Nunamed — the oldest and largest conference on health research in Greenland, which offered an interdisciplinary forum for practitioners and researchers working in Greenland and across the Arctic to discuss their findings and debate current issues in medical research.
When I first heard about Nunamed , I had just started working on our new research project, Covid and global mental health: importance of cultural context. The project aims to investigate medical and lay narratives of COVID-related mental distresses and healing practices across various cultural contexts, to understand how clinicians and mental health workers apply or refine mental health concepts and research instruments developed for global mental health.
It also aims to give recognition to the expertise that comes from individuals and communities in specific social, cultural, and economic environments. Initially, I was supposed to focus on Russia, but my work in Russia was interrupted by the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February and the following war between the two countries. Attempting to redefine the object of my research inquiry, I came to be preoccupied with the ways Arctic communities have experienced the pandemic.
Nunamed offered a rare opportunity to learn about current trends and major debates in mental health research in Greenland, and to understand how local communities across the arctic have experienced and managed the pandemic.