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Research Topic : Participatory
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  • Funded Activity

    Participatory Action Research To Improve Diabetes Self-management For Aboriginal Families

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $46,550.00
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    Funded Activity

    Evaluation Of Family Well Being Empowerment Program: A Participatory Action Research Initiative

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $487,920.00
    Summary
    We have shown that family well being empowerment training in Indigenous communities can significantly enhance program participants' sense of control and responsibility for the conditions affecting their health and well being (Tsey and Every, 2000a;Tsey and Every, 2000b). Following this, there has been a great deal of interest and demand for the family well being program not only in Indigenous Australia, but also among Maori people in New Zealand. Presently, we are involved in four collaborative .... We have shown that family well being empowerment training in Indigenous communities can significantly enhance program participants' sense of control and responsibility for the conditions affecting their health and well being (Tsey and Every, 2000a;Tsey and Every, 2000b). Following this, there has been a great deal of interest and demand for the family well being program not only in Indigenous Australia, but also among Maori people in New Zealand. Presently, we are involved in four collaborative initiatives with indigenous communities in response to growing interest and demand for the program. The current proposal is a joint initiative between University of Queensland, Apunipima Cape York Health Council and Gurriny Yealamucka Health Services which aims to: a. Consolidate and extend the existing family well being initiatives in Hopevale and Yarrabah to two other north Queensland communities (yet to be selected from several that have expressed an interest), using a participatory action research process b. Undertake a meta evaluation of outcomes across all four sites This proposal aims to increase our understanding about ways in which individuals and groups of people can be better supported in their efforts to bring about changes in personal and social life.
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    Funded Activity

    Meaningful Engagement Of Adolescents In Health Programming And Evaluation

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $128,224.00
    Summary
    Adolescence is a critical developmental period of immense potential where health behaviours can be established that affect the lifecourse, and indeed the next generation. The Jharkhand Initiative for Adolescent Health trial set in rural India is exploring how meaningful engagement and participation of adolescents in their own peer-led community health intervention groups can lead to better health in marginalised adolescent girls, assisting us to better help vulnerable adolescents everywhere.
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    Funded Activity

    Improving Linkages For Chronic Disease Prevention In Indigenous Communities: A Quality Improvement Approach.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $318,768.00
    Summary
    Primary health care and public health are often conceived as two entities providing complementary services within the health system. This research aims to better understand how to link these complementary services by using quality improvement methods and to identify successful interventions that facilitate these linkages in the prevention of chronic disease in Indigenous communities.
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    Funded Activity

    Looking Forward - Moving Forward Project: Transforming Systems To Improve Mental Health And Drug And Alcohol Outcomes For Aboriginal Peoples

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $1,304,508.00
    Summary
    Despite the clear need for support, Aboriginal people do not access mental health and drug and alcohol services at a level that corresponds with their need. We need to know how services can respond appropriately to this high-risk group of people. This project brings together Perth-based services, researchers and local Aboriginal Elders to implement and evaluate a framework for organisational change that will transform the way in which services respond to Aboriginal people.
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    Funded Activity

    Decolonising Practice In Aboriginal And Torres Strait Islander Primary Health Care

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $1,451,491.00
    Summary
    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander primary health care organisations do much to address issues surrounding ongoing colonisation, such as racism, discrimination, lack of power and control, and support for cultural identity and self-determination. This project examines what strategies organisations use, how these impact people's experiences of care and their health, and how policy could better support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health organisations in this role.
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    Funded Activity

    Natural Helper Intervention Type Model For Aboriginal Australians

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $307,946.00
    Summary
    Shaouli Shahid, a social scientist and promising early career researcher, aims to promote community competence to achieve better health outcomes for Aboriginal men in WA. The project will be led by trained natural helpers from the community to promote a healthy life-style and motivate their peers through educational presentations and a BMI competition. The whole strategy will be developed in consultation with the Aboriginal men’s groups in WA. Outcomes will be measured, evaluated and shared with .... Shaouli Shahid, a social scientist and promising early career researcher, aims to promote community competence to achieve better health outcomes for Aboriginal men in WA. The project will be led by trained natural helpers from the community to promote a healthy life-style and motivate their peers through educational presentations and a BMI competition. The whole strategy will be developed in consultation with the Aboriginal men’s groups in WA. Outcomes will be measured, evaluated and shared with participants on a regular basis.
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    Funded Activity

    Indigenous Men Taking Their Rightful Place In Society?: A Participatory Action Research Process.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $705,750.00
    Summary
    Men's health groups are increasingly being accepted as important strategies in improving health and wellbeing, especially in Indigenous communities. However, it is hard to find systematic documentation and evaluation of such initiatives in the literature. Since August 2001, we have been facilitating and analysing a Participatory Action Research (PAR) process designed to support members of a men's health group in Yarrabah, a rural Aboriginal community near Cairns (north Queensland), take greater .... Men's health groups are increasingly being accepted as important strategies in improving health and wellbeing, especially in Indigenous communities. However, it is hard to find systematic documentation and evaluation of such initiatives in the literature. Since August 2001, we have been facilitating and analysing a Participatory Action Research (PAR) process designed to support members of a men's health group in Yarrabah, a rural Aboriginal community near Cairns (north Queensland), take greater control and responsibility for the factors influencing their health and wellbeing. The PAR process is providing initial evidence indicating that the development of men's health groups in Indigenous settings can lead to social and behavioural change and that PAR is potentially a useful tool in working towards social change. The current proposal is a joint initiative between the academic partners and the men's group leadership and proposes among other things to: a) consolidate and extend the existing PAR initiative with members of the Yarrabah Men's Health Group and their community; b) adapt and pilot the PAR model in another north Queensland community; and c) undertake a systematic and comparative evaluation across the two sites to determine the medium -long term usefulness of men's health groups as health promotion strategies especially in rural-remote Indigenous settings. These types of micro-level studies have important implications for the way community development is perceived and approached in Indigenous settings.
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    Showing 1-8 of 8 Funded Activites

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