An important new publication – ‘Indigenous identity in contemporary psychology: dilemmas, developments, directions’ – was launched at the Centre for Aboriginal Studies of Curtin University in Perth, Western Australia on 30 April. Continue reading
Category: Article type
Review of the NHMRC Road Map: a strategic framework for improving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health through research
The Strategic Framework for Improving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health through Research (the Road Map), originally developed in 2002, is now under review. Continue reading
Links to Australian Government Budget 2008-09: information of relevance to Indigenous health
Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan delivered his first Australian Government Budget on Tuesday evening, 13 May 2008. The following links provide information on the Budget and its implications for Indigenous health. Continue reading
Australia 2020 Summit
The Prime Minister of Australia Kevin Rudd convened the Australia 2020 Summit at Parliament House on 19 and 20 April 2008 to help shape a long term strategy for the nation’s future. To do this, 1000 Australians were brought together to debate and develop long-term options for the nation, in relation to ten topics:
- The productivity agenda – education, skills, training, science and innovation;
View background paper (PDF – 31KB) - The future of the Australian economy;
View background paper (PDF – 32KB) - Population, sustainability, climate change and water;
View background paper (PDF – 777KB) - Future directions for rural industries and rural communities;
View background paper (PDF – 630KB) - A long-term national health strategy – including the challenges of preventative health, workforce planning and the ageing population;
View background paper (PDF – 314KB) - Strengthening communities, supporting families and social inclusion;
View background paper (PDF – 305KB) - Options for the future of Indigenous Australia;
View background paper (PDF – 182KB) - Towards a creative Australia: the future of the arts, film and design;
View background paper (PDF – 194KB) - The future of Australian governance: renewed democracy, a more open government (including the role of the media), the structure of the Federation and the rights and responsibilities of citizens; and
View background paper (PDF – 260KB) - Australia’s future security and prosperity in a rapidly changing region and world.
View background paper (PDF – 650KB)
The stream ‘Options for the future of Indigenous Australia’ was co-chaired by dr Jackie Huggins AM and the Hon Jenny Macklin MP.
View information
A summary of the discussion and top ideas of this session are available in the Initial Report (pages 26-28.
The priority themes of this stream were:
- Increased formal recognition of Australia’s Indigenous peoples;
- New accountability structures for governments and service delivery arrangements in Indigenous affairs;
- Renewed focus on Indigenous children and their families;
- “Close the gap” in all areas;
- Cultural identity and racism.
In the lead-up to the conference, a Youth Summit was held on 12 and 13 April 2008. The vision and key ideas developed here have been compiled in a youth communique, which was previded to all delegates of the 2020 Summit.
View Youth Communique (PDF – 122KB)
The Initial Report from the 2020 Summit was presented to the Prime Minister after the final session on Sunday 20 April, and sets out the key results of the Summit discussions.
View initial report (PDF – 1.0MB – large file warning!)
View initial report (Word Doc – 2.6MB – large file warning!)
A more complete record of the Summit will be available in May. This record will include:
- A more formal and detailed record of all the discussion sessions, picking up on the range of ideas put forward;
- Overviews of the preliminary Summit events, including the Youth Summit, local summits and schools summit;
- A strategic overview of the ideas raised in the public submission.
The Prime Minister announced that he would like to continue the “national conversation” through the Australia 2020 website. A new website will be developed, to provide the option to submit ideas and submissions, which will replace the current 2020 Summit website and be available by 7 May 2008.
- Further information:
- 2020 summit coverage
View ABC News summit coverage - Indigenous leader calls for 2020 action
View ABC media release (21 April 2008) - 2020 Indigenous youth delegate calls for national body
View ABC media release (19 April 2008) - Submissions for the 2020 Summit
View submissions (by topic)
- 2020 summit coverage
- Contact details:
- Australia 2020 Summit Secretariat, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, 1 National Circuit, Barton ACT 2600, ph: 1800 703 599 (toll free – during business hours Eastern Standard Time), website: www.australia2020.gov.au
Good tucker, good health: National Nutrition Networks Conference ’08
The Good tucker – good health conference, the first of its kind since 1999 Continue reading
TheMHS Summer Forum – Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander’s mental health and emotional wellbeing
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The title of the 2008 Mental Health Services (TheMHS) Summer Forum was ‘Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander’s mental health and emotional wellbeing’, and had the theme: ‘time to listen, time to act’. The forum was held on 21 – 22 February 2008, at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney . The Forum was attended by 190 people, ranging from consumers to researchers to representatives from the health workforce.
The welcome to country was provided by Uncle George Fisher, with live Didjeridu music by Nathan Scott. The Forum welcome was provided by Kevin Kellehear, chairperson. Tom Brideson provided the introduction to the Forum.
Presentations included:
- Calma T. Human rights, Indigenous communities and social and emotional well-being
- Milroy H. Children, transgenerational trauma and the well-being of Indigenous communities
- Milne M. Maori mental health: past, present, future
- Hunter E. Promoting mental health and wellbeing in remote communities: overcoming the digital divide
- Ober C. Workforce development and capacity building: considerations for the future
- Brideson T. Lessons from the current roll out of the Aboriginal Mental Health Workforce Program
- Phillips N. From the edge of nowhere to the eye of the storm: Gubbah psychiatrist talks about Indigenous mental health
- Roberts R, Sanders T. What are the key elements of a good service?
- Harris V. The Social and Emotional Wellbeing Program within the Co-operative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health
- Dudley M. Suicide prevention
- Wieland B, Dodd Z, Wilmott Elder J, Krieg A. A learning guide: a process of cultural respect within a mental health service
- Rosen A. What can the wider community learn from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people?
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The National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Mental Health First Aid training and research program was launched at the conference.
Some of the presentations will be made available on the TheMHS website. TheMHS will also attempt to make the presentations available in audio form on a CD. Please contact TheMHS to obtain your copy of this CD.
Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet staff member Ineke Krom ran a HealthInternet café at the conference.
- For further information:
- Contact details:
- TheMHS, PO Box 192, Balmain NSW 2041, ph: (02) 9810 8700, fax: (02) 9810 8733, email: info@themhs.org
We’d like to thank the conference participants who provided written permission for us to display their photos here (click on the photos to enlarge).
Apology to the Stolen Generations
The following information has been adapted from information provided by ABC news.
The Federal Government made a formal apology to the members of the Stolen Generation on 13 February 2008. Parliament’s opening ceremony included a traditional Welcome to Country by members of the Ngunnawal people and the first item of business was the apology, delivered by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.
Prime Minister Rudd apologised for the laws and policies of successive parliaments and governments that have inflicted profound grief, suffering and loss, and especially for the removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children from their families, communities and their country.
He used the word ‘sorry’ three times:
‘For the pain, suffering and hurt of these Stolen Generations, their descendants and for their families left behind, we say sorry.’
‘To the mothers and fathers, the brothers and sisters, for the breaking up of families and communities, we say sorry.’
‘And for the indignity and degradation thus inflicted on a proud people and a proud culture, we say sorry.’
He says it is the first step where the Parliament resolves the injustices of the past, which must never happen again.
With a future:
- where we harness the determination of all Australians, Indigenous and non-Indigenous, to close the gap that lies between us in life expectancy, educational achievement and economic opportunity.
- where we embrace the possibility of new solutions to enduring problems where old approaches have changed.
- based on mutual respect, mutual resolve and mutual responsibility.
- where all Australians, whatever their origins, are truly equal partners, with equal opportunities and with an equal stake in shaping the next chapter in the history of this great country.
Thousands of people around the country gathered to watch the apology on large TV screens.
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- For further information:
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- Let the healing begin
View response to government: Equal Rights and Opportunity Commission (13 February 2008) - Australians flock to watch apology
View news item: ABC (13 February 2008) - Rudd: We say sorry
View news item: ABC (13 February 2008) - The apology
View news item: ABC (12 February 2008) - PM tables Stolen Generations apology
View media item: ABC (12 February 2008) - G-G urges support for apology
View media item: ABC (12 February 2008) - Us taken-away kids
View news item: ABC (12 February 2008) - MPs ‘welcomed to country’
View news item: ABC (12 February 2008) - Stolen generations (tag)
View news items: ABC The apology
View news item (12 February 2008) - View website: National Sorry Day Committee Inc
- View website: Stolen Generations Alliance:
- Let the healing begin
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- For further information:
Formal alliance between the Government and Indigenous Peoples to ‘Close the Gap’
The following information has been adapted from information provided by ABC news and the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity (HREOC) website.
The Government and Indigenous health leaders today signed a Statement of Intent in the Great Hall of Parliament House to work together to achieve equality in health status and life expectancy between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and non-Indigenous Australians by the year 2030. The move has been welcomed by Indigenous and non-Indigenous health representatives and Australian civil society and was the culmination of the first ever two-day Indigenous Health Equality Summit held in Canberra from March 18-20. The Summit has developed working targets and benchmarks to be used to close the gap in Indigenous life expectancy by 2030.
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Indigenous child index launched in Western Australia
The following information has been adapted from information provided by ABC news and the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research website.
The Indigenous Australian Early Development Index was launched in Perth on 20 January 2008 by Deputy Prime Minister, Julia Gillard. The index is an attempt to address inequalities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children when they begin formal schooling.
It involves a checklist questionnaire which contains over 100 questions measuring physical health and wellbeing, social competence, emotional maturity, language and cognitive skills, communication skills, and general knowledge.
The launch of the index follows successful trials with over 30,000 children in 414 communities. The project is expected to extend to other states next year.
The Australian Early Development Index: Building Better Communities for Children project is conducted by the Centre for Community Child Health at the Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne, in partnership with the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, Perth. The Federal Government will provide nearly $16 million to the project.
- For further information:
- New health index to assess Indigenous children
View media release: ABC - Indigenous child-health plan released
View video: ABC News - Aboriginal child index launched in WA
View media release: Sydney Morning Herald (20 January 2008) - Start early to boost Indigenous student services
View media release: Telethon Institute for Child Health Research - View website: Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne (for general information on the index)
- View website: Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, Perth
- New health index to assess Indigenous children
Budgeri Booroody: excellence in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health conference
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Budgeri Booroody, which means ‘good and getting better’ in the language of the Eora people of coastal Sydney, was the name of a two-day conference focusing on quality and best practice within the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community controlled health sector. The conference, held 21 – 23 November, 2007 in Sydney, New South Wales, provided OATSIH-funded community controlled health services with the opportunity to come together at a national forum to share information about best practice and to hear about current research in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander healthcare.
The welcome to country was provided by Allen Madden from the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council. The conference welcome and overview was presented by Lesley Podesta, First Assistant Secretary, OATSIH, Department of Health and Ageing.
Keynote presentations included:
- Stephanie Bell, Central Australian Aboriginal Congress: Having quality at the top of your organisation’s agenda
- Putting research into practice successfully for quality outcomes
- Allen Benson, Native Counselling Services Alberta, Canada: Managing for quality
- Mark Wenitong, Australian Indigenous Doctors’ Association: Quality models that work
- Julie Tongs and Karen Flick, Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Services, together with Aunty Rose Fernando, Gamilaroi Elder: Circle of life and wellbeing
The conference included breakout sessions focussing on the following topics:
- Quality at the top of your agenda
- Research into practice
- Managing for quality
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The centrepiece of the conference was the inaugural National Excellence Awards in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health ceremony, which was held on 22 November, 2007. A total of 77 individuals and organisations submitted nominations for the awards. The nominations were judged by an eight member expert panel.
The winners in the six award categories were:
- Mary Martin: Lifetime achievement in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health
- Matthew Cooke: Young leader in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health
- Bernadette Shields: Individual contribution to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health
- Broome Regional Aboriginal Medical Service (Kimberley Satellite Dialysis Service): Excellence and innovation in service delivery
- Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service (Youth Diversion Program): Excellence and innovation in community health outcomes
- Maari Ma (Lower Western Sector Agreement): Working together – partnering for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health
Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet staff, Neil Thomson and Ineke Krom, ran a HealthInternet café at the conference.
- For further information:
- View conference website
- Awards showcase excellence in Indigenous health care
View media release: Department of Health and Ageing (22 November 2007) - View National Excellence Awards in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health website
We’d like to thank the conference participants who provided written permission for us to display their photos here (click on the photos to enlarge).