2012
DOI: 10.1177/1757975912441230
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Appropriate health promotion for Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities: crucial for closing the gap

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. I… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Aboriginal communities, and particularly geographically defined, selfcontained communities in regional and remote areas, as per Demaio et al's principles for culturally appropriate health promotion. 17…”
Section: Commit Campaignmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Aboriginal communities, and particularly geographically defined, selfcontained communities in regional and remote areas, as per Demaio et al's principles for culturally appropriate health promotion. 17…”
Section: Commit Campaignmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a number of Aboriginal groups have initiated or taken part in many Act‐Belong‐Commit events in participating communities, there has been neither a specific focus on Aboriginal groups, nor any attempt to deliver the Act‐Belong‐Commit messages in a specifically culturally appropriate manner. Although the fundamental principles of Act‐Belong‐Commit appear to apply across cultures and ethnicities, a more culturally appropriate framework for communication channels and intervention strategies could be more efficacious for Aboriginal communities, and particularly geographically defined, self‐contained communities in regional and remote areas, as per Demaio et al's principles for culturally appropriate health promotion . Given Aboriginal people's focus on family, community and the social care of others, it was anticipated that the principles underlying the Act‐Belong‐Commit framework would readily translate to an Aboriginal cultural framework for mental health promotion.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is no simple way to reduce the burden of substance-related harm experienced by Aboriginal Australians [8] and, as such, a range of effective and culturally safe approaches are required. Gray et al [9] identify appropriate strategies including: acute treatment (sobering-up centres, detoxification) [10]; counselling and residential treatment [11][12][13][14]; support services (health services, accommodation, crisis care) and prevention (health promotion, cultural initiatives, supply reduction) [4,15,16]. Regardless of the strategy, access to Aboriginal community-controlled health services is vital to an Aboriginal person's right to selfdetermination [13,17], even if some Aboriginal patients prefer to access non-Aboriginal-specific services [18].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 Culturally sensitive health promotion (also known as culturally appropriate, culturally competent, multicultural or culturally tailored) is underpinned by community involvement and ownership, learns from the expertise of community members and provides opportunities for building on existing community strengths and capacity. [1][2][3] These approaches ensure that health promotion is relevant, effective and supports community empowerment. [3][4][5] In 2013, the Hunter Multicultural Community Drug Action Team (CDAT) was made aware of concerns about alcohol-related harm in communities originating from Sub-Saharan Africa (hereafter 'African'), which included a large number of humanitarian arrivals.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%