| Abstract | Interdisciplinary collaboration contributes to the improvement of health services and organizational efficiency. However, several studies conducted in urban and rural environments have revealed that this collaboration continues to face major problems. In remote regions where cooperation appears to develop more naturally, the situation seems different, but for reasons that remain unclear. This case study was carried out among primary health care and social services providers in James Bay Cree territory. The purpose was to gain insight into how interdisciplinary cooperation is structured in such a context using the model developed by D'Amour and Goulet (2003).
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