Literature DB >> 24801784

Appropriate health promotion for Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities: crucial for closing the gap.

Alessandro Demaio1, Marlene Drysdale, Maximilian de Courten.   

Abstract

Health promotion for Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and their people has generally had limited efficacy and poor sustainability. It has largely failed to recognise and appreciate the importance of local cultures and continues to have minimal emphasis on capacity building, community empowerment and local ownership. Culturally Appropriate Health Promotion is a framework of principles developed in 2008 with the World Health Organization and the Global Alliance for Health Promotion. It serves as a guide for community-focused health promotion practice to be built on and shaped by the respect for understanding and utilisation of local knowledge and culture. Culturally Appropriate Health Promotion is not about targeting, intervening or responding. Rather, it encourages health programme planners and policymakers to have a greater understanding, respect, a sense of empowerment and collaboration with communities, and their sociocultural environment to improve health. This commentary aims to examine and apply the eight principles of Culturally Appropriate Health Promotion to the Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander context. It proposes a widespread adoption of the framework for a more respectful, collaborative, locally suitable and therefore appropriate approach to Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health promotion.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Advocacy; collaboration; community; equity and social justice; health determinants; health promotion; partnership; policy; programme planning and management

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 24801784     DOI: 10.1177/1757975912441230

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Health Promot        ISSN: 1757-9759


  5 in total

Review 1.  Genetics, adaptation to environmental changes and archaic admixture in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus in Indigenous Australians.

Authors:  Malgorzata Monika Brzozowska; Essi Havula; Richard Benjamin Allen; Murray P Cox
Journal:  Rev Endocr Metab Disord       Date:  2019-09       Impact factor: 6.514

2.  Mortality in a cohort of remote-living Aboriginal Australians and associated factors.

Authors:  Zoë Hyde; Kate Smith; Leon Flicker; David Atkinson; Osvaldo P Almeida; Nicola T Lautenschlager; Anna Dwyer; Dina LoGiudice
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-04-05       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 3.  Effects of Nutritional Interventions on Cardiovascular Disease Health Outcomes in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians: A Scoping Review.

Authors:  Bobby Porykali; Alyse Davies; Cassandra Brooks; Hannah Melville; Margaret Allman-Farinelli; Julieann Coombes
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2021-11-15       Impact factor: 5.717

4.  Vision, future, cycle and effect: A community life course approach to prevent prenatal alcohol exposure in central Australia.

Authors:  Donna Lemon; Justine Swan-Castine; Elizabeth Connor; Fleur van Dooren; Jenna Pauli; John Boffa; James Fitzpatrick; Rebecca Anne Pedruzzi
Journal:  Health Promot J Austr       Date:  2021-11-24

5.  Understanding remote Aboriginal drug and alcohol residential rehabilitation clients: Who attends, who leaves and who stays?

Authors:  Alice Munro; Anthony Shakeshaft; Courtney Breen; Philip Clare; Julaine Allan; Norm Henderson
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Rev       Date:  2018-01-18
  5 in total

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