NAIDOC week, 7 July to 14 July 2002

The National Aboriginal Islander Day Observance Committee (NAIDOC) week is an annual event of national importance. It is the outcome of a long history of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander efforts to bring issues of concern to the attention of governments and the general public. Comprehensive historical details about the origins of NAIDOC week are available on the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSIC) website and the NAIDOC Victoria website.

NAIDOC week celebrates the diverse and unique traditions and culture of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and recognises their on-going fight for justice and equality. All Australians are invited to join in the 2002 NAIDOC celebrations to be held in Sydney from 7 July to 14 July.

The theme for NAIDOC Week 2002 is ‘recognition, rights and reform’. NAIDOC celebrations will commemorate the 10th anniversary of the historic High Court decision in Mabo and the gains that have flowed from it. For further information on the theme for 2002 (and themes from previous years), including the report Recognition, rights and reform: a report to Government on native title social justice measures visit the ATSIC website.

As the host city, Sydney will stage this year’s National NAIDOC Awards Ball on Friday, 12 July 2002. These national awards recognise the significant contributions that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people make within Australian communities in many diverse fields. Nominations for the 2002 National NAIDOC Awards close June 14 2002. Further infomation and nomination forms are available from ATSIC Regional or State Offices or from the ATSIC website. Award winners will be announced at the National NAIDOC Ball in Sydney on 12 July.

For great suggestions regarding how individuals and groups (including families, workplaces and schools) can celebrate NAIDOC week visit the ATSIC website and/or the NAIDOC Victoria website

Pap test management review seeks input from Indigenous stakeholders

The National Cervical Screening Program has begun a review of the National Health and Medical Research Council’s Screening to Prevent Cervical Cancer: Guidelines for the management of women with screen detected abnormalities. The current guidelines were released in 1994 and need to be updated in light of the current evidence on management of cervical disease.

A multi-disciplinary Guideline Review Group involving national experts met on 26 November 2001 to establish the main areas of review. Their terms of reference are:

1. Gain agreement on the terminology to be used for cervical cytology reporting
2. Review the scope and coverage of the current Guidelines to identify the areas that need revision
3. Revise the current clinical practice guidelines consistent with the terminology, best scientific evidence and practice and with regard to cost implications
4. Develop an implementation plan, including a plan for the production of a consumer version of the revised Guidelines

Membership of the group is made up of the following clinical disciplines; Cytologist, General Practitioner, Gynaecological oncologist, Gynaecologist, Pathologist and Virologist while the non clinical areas include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander representation, Consumers, Epidemiologists, Health Communication Specialist, Health Economist and Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care. In addition the various professional associations and colleges are represented.

The group is being chaired by Dr Ian Hammond, a Gynaecological Oncologist from King Edward Memorial Hospital for Women, Perth WA and Chair of the Gynaecological Oncology Subspeciality committee of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. The Deputy Chair is Dr Annabelle Farnsworth Director of Cytopathology at Douglass Hanly Moir and Chair of the National Quality Assurance Working Group for the National Cervical Screening Program.

The Review Group welcomes comments from all stakeholders throughout the review process and will be consulting members of the public, health professionals and policy makers. Until 31 May 2002 it is seeking input from stakeholders about the main issues they feel need to be addressed within the terms of reference . If you wish to be part of the consultative process you can register at the web site www.csp.nsw.gov.au where you can also submit any comments or suggestions to the Review Group. For those who can not access the web site you can participate in the process and provide comments and suggestions in writing to the:

Guideline Review Group
C/- NSW Cervical Screening Program
PO Box 533
Wentworthville NSW 2145

Links to Commonwealth Budget 2002-03: information of relevance to Indigenous health and well being

Federal Treasurer Peter Costello delivered his seventh Commonwealth Budget on Tuesday evening, 14 May 2002. The following links provide information on the Budget and its implications for Indigenous health and well being. They include statements by various ministers, and comments by peak Indigenous bodies before and after the release of the Budget.

Full Budget details
Full Commonwealth Budget details are available at the official Budget website.

Health and Ageing Portfolio Budget 2002 – 2003
2002-03 Portfolio Budget Statements for the Health and Ageing Portfolio are available on the Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing website. Part C discusses the performance of individual outcomes within the Department, and includes Outcome 7: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health (PDF – 194KB).

Further details regarding the Health and Ageing Portfolio Budget are available on the following web pages:

Health Budget Ageing Budget
Health Budget at a glance
Health Budget index
Health media releases
Health fact sheets
Ageing Budget at a glance
Ageing Budget index
Ageing media releases
Ageing fact sheets

Information on the future of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) (Health fact sheet No.1: Securing the future of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme) receives special attention and is accompanied by a series of answers, by Minister Kay Patterson, to questions regarding the PBS.

Immigration, Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs Portfolio Budget 2002-03
2002-03 Portfolio Budget Statements (PDF – 1.5MB) for the the Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs Portfolio are available on the Department’s website.

Part C of the document includes sections on the following:

  • Sound and well-coordinated policies, programs and decision making processes in relation to Indigenous affairs and reconciliation;
  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission;
  • Aboriginal Hostels Limited;
  • Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies;
  • Indigenous Business Australia;
  • Indigenous Land Corporation; and
  • Torres Strait Regional Authority

Indigenous Affairs statements released on May 14 include:

Indigenous Affairs statements by other Ministers include:

National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO)
Prior to the delivery of the Budget, NACCHO raised concerns regarding the impact of proposed changes to the PBS.

Short sighted approach to medicines (9 May 2002)

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC)
ATSIC Chairman Geoff Clark has released a background brief outlining ‘ATSIC’s budget, its role and its capacity and responsibility to provide services’ and a statement regarding ATSIC-specific funding for the 2002-03 financial year.

ATSIC Budget background
2002-03 Budget holds the line (media release)

Recipients of the 2002 Puggy Hunter Aboriginal Health Scholarships are announced

The first recipients of the Puggy Hunter Scholarships for Indigenous students in medicine and nursing were recently announced by Federal Health Minister Kay Patterson in Melbourne.

Speaking at the 5th Wonca World Rural Health Conference (1 – 3 May 2002), Senator Patterson announced that the first round of scholarships had been awarded to five medicine and three nursing students. She described the scholarships as:

‘… a lasting tribute to Dr Hunter and will go part of the way to addressing the under-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in health professions. The recipients of this award have demonstrated both a commitment to leadership in the health sector and a desire to work in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. These skills are essential for developing a generation of skilled Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health professionals to continue the work that Dr Hunter tirelessly dedicated his life to.’

National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) Chairperson, Ms Pat Anderson, also highlighted the importance of addressing the shortage of Aboriginal health professionals:

‘The scholarships are a testimony to the late Dr Hunter’s life-long campaign for Aboriginal health. As the [former] NACCHO Chairperson, he was passionately committed to achieving change by empowering Aboriginal people through increasing Aboriginal community control of their health services… The advantages of a strong Aboriginal workforce are obvious. Aboriginal workers in the health profession are more likely to return and provide health care in their home communities. They don’t face the kind of cross-cultural problems of many outsiders. And they can serve as health advocates for their communities, making sure that governments deliver effective and appropriate health policies… They also are important role models for young people in their community. The existence of qualified and successful professionals can be a much needed boost to the ambitions and hopes of young Aboriginal people.’

Funding of $1.23 million over five academic years (2002 – 2006) will provide at least 44 undergraduate scholarships to train Aboriginal health workers and Indigenous students in medicine and nursing. This will include:

  • 10 undergraduate Indigenous medical scholarships;
  • 10 undergraduate Indigenous nursing health scholarships;
  • 12 Aboriginal health worker scholarships for completion of Vocational Educational Training sector courses; and
  • 12 Advanced Tertiary Diploma level Aboriginal health worker training scholarships or articulation into other tertiary level health courses.

The funding will provide students with $10,000 per annum over the term of their enrolment. In addition, it is proposed to provide up to $5 000 per annum to each student as a disadvantage supplement.

Details of the successful applicants for 2002

Nursing students:

  • Emily Hunter, 3rd year student in 2002 at Notre Dame University, Broome Campus;
  • David B Baker, 3rd year student in 2002 at Australian Catholic University, Brisbane;
  • Inawantji Scales, 1st year student in 2002 at the Northern Territory University in Darwin, and the first girl from the Pitjantjatjara Lands to complete year 12.

Medical students:

  • Kiarna Adams, 3rd year student in 2002 at University of WA;
  • Sarah-Jane Gibbons, 3rd year student in 2002 at Newcastle University;
  • Bradley Murphy, 3rd year student in 2002 at James Cook University;
  • Tanya Keane, 4th year student in 2002 at Newcastle University;
  • Olivia O’Donoghue, 5th year student in 2002 at Adelaide University.

For further information:

OATSIH website: http://www.health.gov.au/internet/wcms/publishing.nsf/Content/health-oatsih-welco.htm
NACCHO website: http://www.naccho.org.au/Scholorships.html

Indigenous palliative care needs study 2002

The Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing has initiated a national scoping study into the needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the area of palliative care. The study is being done by consultants Kate Sullivan and Associates and will be conducted throughout 2002.

The primary aim of the study is to identify the palliative care services available to Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islanders, find out how well these services work and whether they can be improved, and determine whether there are areas where needs are not being met. This information will be used to inform and improve the Commonwealth’s National Palliative Care Strategy, and identify areas where resources are most needed. The formal objectives of the scoping study are to identify:

  1. Existing activities in palliative care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples at Commonwealth,State/Territory and community levels, including mainstream programs, which incorporate Indigenous components as well as Indigenous-specific activities.
  2. Areas that could be enhanced or developed under the National Palliative Care Strategy at Commonwealth, State/Territory and community levels.
  3. The particular needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples for palliative care, taking into account the diversity of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and the different needs of rural, remote and metropolitan communities.
  4. Spiritual and cultural practices that relate to death and examine the extent to which these are being implemented in a culturally sensitive way, taking into account the diversity of settings and cultural beliefs.

The project recognises that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities’ experience of loss and grief is profoundly affected by socioeconomic disadvantage, high death rates, and past policies which have caused separation and loss. It also recognises the central place of family and of the land, and that cultural and spiritual beliefs are particularly important in providing appropriate palliative care services to Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islanders.

The scoping study is overseen by a Steering Committee which includes Indigenous members from the Congress of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Nurses and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Research Agenda Working Group. The team of consultants, headed by Kate Sullivan, also includes Indigenous researchers and interviewers with specialist skills and experience in working with Indigenous communities.

The project is being conducted in four parts. The first (stages 1-3), which will be completed in April 2002, includes a literature review and scoping study, conducted by telephone. A series of questions have been developed for state and regional agencies, service providers, and community organisations, to gather information about palliative care services in their regions. The aim of the phone survey is to find out who is doing what (including provision of appropriate training) to enable the Steering Committee and consultants to decide which communities should be visited later in the research.

The second part (stages 4-5, May-June 2002) will focus on methodology development and partnership development with the communities in which the consultants wish to undertake field work. Relevant ethics committees and community organisations will be asked to review the methodology.

Field work will be conducted during stages 6-7 of the project (July-October 2002). The purpose of the field work will be to record from the perspective of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people their experience of existing palliative care services and the unmet needs they identify. The field work will include rural and remote areas and some metropolitan centres where services are often not appropriate to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander needs. The field work will be conducted by male and female team members and will provide for remuneration for local Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander assistance. A question sheet will be posted to community organisations in selected communities that cannot be visited.

The final part, stages 8-9, will be the reporting phases. There will be several rounds of reporting and the final report will be in two parts – a detailed report for the Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing, and a short ‘plain English’ report which will be made available to all communities and organisations that have participated in the study. It is expected that reporting will be finalised by March 2003.

Information about the study and the consultants can be obtained from http://member.telpacific.com.au/ksa/. A newsletter will be posted on the website and distributed to participating communities and organisations.

The consultants are keen to hear from people who are providing palliative care services to Indigenous people, and are particularly interested in examples that are considered good practice.

Kate Sullivan can be contacted at (02) 9810 5755 or 1800 810 575.