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Australian Indigenous HealthBulletin
Vol 7 No 2 April 2007 - June 2007: ISSN 1445-7253
A peer-reviewed electronic journal from the Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet
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This section of the Bulletin contains information
about major public events, new programs and relevant staff appointments.
If you would like to contribute to this section, contact
us.
Enhancing Indigenous Capacity: Building a Sustainable
Future: a national symposium on workforce development in Indigenous maternal
and child health
The national symposium Enhancing Indigenous Capacity:
Building a Sustainable Future was held in Perth , Western Australia
, 8-9 May 2007. The symposium was hosted and supported by the Rio Tinto
Child Health Partnership and sponsored by the Australian Government
Department of Health and Ageing.
The major aims of the symposium were to:
- enable a range of stakeholders from across Australia to share
their expertise, experiences, research and resources;
- identify clear directions and strategies at both a practical
and policy level for enhancing the skills of the Indigenous health
workforce, increasing the number of health workers in Indigenous
communities and improving the coordination and delivery of primary
health care services to Indigenous people; and
- provide health workers with resources to assist them to address
maternal alcohol and tobacco use in Indigenous communities.
The symposium examined issues central to the development
of the maternal and child health workforce in Indigenous communities,
including how to:
- build the child and maternal health skills of health workers
in Indigenous communities;
- increase the number of Indigenous health workers and enhance
training and accreditation so they can deliver comprehensive and
holistic primary health care; and
- coordinate service delivery across government agencies and the
community controlled sector to improve Indigenous peoples access
to and utilisation of services.
The proceedings started with a welcome to country by
Noongar Elder, Vivienne Hansen. The opening address was by Professor
Fiona Stanley, Director of the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research
and Chair of the National Advisory Committee, Rio Tinto Child Health
Partnership.
The International Keynote address was presented by:
- Dr Janet Smylie, Associate Professor, Department of Public Health
Sciences at the University of Toronto and research scientist at
St Michael's Hospital at the Centre for Research on Inner City Health
– Kokum, what makes baby well?
Other keynote addresses were presented by:
- Dr Kathryn Panaretto, Medical Director at the Townsville Aboriginal
and Islander Health Services - The Mums and Babies Program
- Donna Ah Chee, Deputy Director Central Australian Aboriginal Congress
- The development of the maternal and child health program
- Sandra Collard, Workforce Issues Project, Aboriginal Health Council
of Western Australia - The workforce issues project at the Aboriginal
Health Council of Western Australia
- Associate Professor Ted Wilkes, Rio Tinto Child Health Partnership
Leader - Aboriginal health: the male perspective
- Dr Kathryn Panaretto, Medical Director at the Townsville Aboriginal
and Islander Health Services - The development and implementation
of a randomised controlled trial of a culturally specific intervention
for pregnant women who smoke
The forum included four workshops:
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Empowerment, Indigenous men's groups and social
and emotional wellbeing: implications for workforce development
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Enhancing the capacity to reduce smoking in Aboriginal
communities
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Alcohol and pregnancy: health professionals making
a difference
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A community controlled approach to reducing the
risk of SIDS in Aboriginal communities
Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet staff Sam Burrow, Sharon
Clews, Ineke Krom and Annemarie Paddick ran a HealthInternet
café at the symposium.
- For further information regarding the symposium contact:
We'd like to thank the symposium participants who provided written permission
for us to display their photos here (click on the photos to enlarge).
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