The previously described survey of food‐purchasing behaviour in a central‐Australian Aboriginal community demonstrated that children have sufficient disposable income to provision themselves directly from food outlets. Subsequently, a community‐based intervention project developed strategies to provide healthier choices for these children. Two years after the initial survey, a follow‐up survey was conducted in which all food purchases by children under the age of 15 in the community were recorded over a two‐week period. The results demonstrate an improvement in the quality of foods and beverages purchased by children at the time of the second survey.
The evaluation of the Healthy Aboriginal LT) petrol-sniffing prevention programs at Yuendumu, Kiniore an; the Pitjantjatjara 'Lands first required a specification of program outcome-which was not changes in the enumerated prevalence of petrol sniffing, but alteration in parental perceptions of the relevance and effectiveness of families' nurturant authority over recalcitrant youngsters. The evaluation then proceeded by a series of interviews with resident or ex-resident adults (Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal) of Yuendumu, Kintore, Kiwirrkurra, Ernabella, Indulkana and Fregon. Adults articulated their efficacy in different ways in each place. Some favoured the conclusion that HALT had helped them, others clearly identified HALT as an obstacle to or a distraction from the implementation of other preventive and curative community-based action. We discerned a ferment of cultural adjustment in the distribution of authority over children among parents and welfare agencies. We caution against finding in HALT's successes a model procedure for benign interventions into such cultural adjustment. (Awt J Public Health 1992; 16: 387-96) n March 1990, the Menzies School of Health Research was contracted by the Aboriginal andHALT has pursued petrol sniffing prevention work at Yuendumu, Kintore and on the Pitjantjatjara Lands. At Yuendumu it successfully combined with an already developed community concern and helped to give that concern further impetus and focus. Petrol sniffing has been eliminated at Yuendumu. At Kintore (and its neighbouring community, Kiwirrkurra) HALT encouraged early community efforts against petrol sniffing and helped to marginalise but not completely to eliminate the practice. On the Pitjantjatjara Homelands, HALT has not yet made any significant impact on petrol sniffmg. though it has recruited and helped certain individuals at ErnabeUa who will be an important pan of any drive against sniFfing there.'
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