Bardi woman Prof Pat Dudgeon gets our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social and Emotional Wellbeing session underway. Must acknowledge colonisation and the strength and resilience of Indigenous peoples, she tells #AustPH2021
Suicide is second leading cause of death of Indigenous men, and 7th leading cause for Indigenous women, Prof Dudgeon says. Institutionalised racism and lack of culturally-appropriate services.
Prof Dudgeon says there is regional disparity among suicide rates for Indigenous people. Reasons include grief and loss in families, dislocation, trans-generational trauma. We need more culturally appropriate services. #AustPH2021
Prof Dudgeon notes the global Indigenous context of suicide, and the ATSISPEP project that outlines what solutions work, and how they can guide responses to support Indigenous suicide prevention activities, cbpatsisp.com.au#AustPH2021
Prof Dudgeon encourages people to view the Manual of Resources in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention, a living document, available via cbpatsisp.com.au
Prof Dudgeon explains WA context, her team, the role of traditional healers, workforce expansion. Some responses are local, some are national. See more at cbpatsisp.com.au and also timhwb.org.au#AustPH2021
Our next presenter, Dr Michael Doyle, is speaking about imprisonment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. He notes the @ulurustatement and its references to imprisonment, imprisonment rates, and how to decrease these rates. #AustPH2021
Dr Doyle says in early 2020, authorities decided to release many prisoners across Australia as the COVID19 pandemic hit. We are now entering a potentially dangerous phase as some measures are being reduced, he says. #AustPH2021
Various factors contributing to imprisonment rates of Indigenous people, including the normalisation of the criminal justice system as a part of life, Dr Doyle says #AustPH2021 .
Dr Doyle says every time an inquiry is held to address imprisonment rates, they all refer to the 1991 Royal Commission. Any future inquiry should look at why some recommendations from the '91 inquiry have not been introduced, he tells #AustPH2021.
Goals of #ClosingTheGap include two references to the criminal justice system. Lots of effort required to ensure adult rates are tracking to parity with non-Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Dr Doyle says. His study explores alcohol use among inmates #AustPH2021
Dr Doyle outlining how men he interviewed felt discriminated on a daily basis, financial difficulties, stress from family conflict. All the inmates relapsed after release. Some were told to go to rehab but wanted to spend time with family first. #AustPH2021
Hope for the future includes justice reinvestment projects, social connection, work, behavioural and social factors, Dr Doyle says. #AustPH2021
We can't rely solely on the individual, we must provide a range of supports, Dr Doyle says. He wants to see leadership scaled up across Australia. #ClosingTheGap#AustPH2021
Wiradjuri woman Dr @michelle_bovill introduces our final speaker, A/Prof @Lisa_J_Whop of @ANUPopHealth. Dr Whop is a descendent of the Wagedagam tribe of the Gumulgal people of Mabuiag Island in the Torres Strait and has family connections to the Darling Downs in SW Qld.
A/Prof @Lisa_J_Whop discuss cervical cancer elimination in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. Measures have included screening and HPV vaccination. #AustPH2021
It will take another 37% reduction to reach elimination of cervical cancer in women in Australia. May reach it by 2028, but factors including COVID19 pandemic still at play, A/Prof @Lisa_J_Whop says #AustPH2021
Massive persistent inequities. Basically largely no progress since 2001. Not just confined to Australia. Why have public health programs not benefitted Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women, A/Prof @Lisa_J_Whop asks #AustPH2021
There are lots of data gaps. We are not on track to achieve elimination, but hope is not lost, A/Prof @Lisa_J_Whop says. Must work with Indigenous communities to develop culturally-appropriate solutions. #AustPH2021
A/Prof @Lisa_J_Whop outlines her research program entitled 'vision: elimination of cervical cancer for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women' with categories including HPV vaccination, cervical screening, advocacy and treatment. #AustPH2021
Next steps include co-designing Indigenous programs, and focusing on community-led implementation, A/Prof @Lisa_J_Whop tells #AustPH2021
A 68% reduction is required to eliminate cervical cancer in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, A/Prof @Lisa_J_Whop. This is achievable, but will take lots of effort, she tells #AustPH2021
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First presenter is Prof Fay Johnson (UTAS) who is explaining safer air for public health in Australia, and fire. How we use fire determines everything else. #AustPH2021
Just like the west of Nth America, we are getting more fires, means more air pollution, and fires in places that never used to burn, eg Tasmanian rainforests, Prof Johnson says. #AustPH2021
It's now time for Prof Tom Calma AO, whose roles include Chancellor of the University of Canberra and co-chair of @RecAustralia, who is delivering the Basil Hertzel Oration #AustPH2021
Prof Calma says the pandemic's ongoing lockdowns are causing challenging times. "This is hard", he says. It also shows much of Australia a reality the country has often avoided. Despite this, there are many lessons to be learned, and wins to be celebrated, he says. #AustPH2021
The Public Health sector is at risk of burn out. Lots of pressures over a long time. We still need to take time to reset, re-energise and refine, Prof Calma says. #AustPH2021
Thank you @ACTHealth@RachelSS_MLA on your address, and outlining some of the responses to health challenges in the ACT which linger, despite the COVID19 pandemic. #AustPH2021.
Thank you @takeshi_kasai@WHOWPRO regional Director for joining #AustPH2021. His regional office features 600 staff, connecting countries to enable constant sharing of information and experience to COVID19, testing and contact tracing, PPE, oxygen concentrators, vaccines.
Dr @takeshi_kasai says 20 months into the pandemic, 8m infected across @WHOWPRO, 108,000 deaths. Situation worsened in early July when Delta strain and other surges arrived. Our share of global cases and deaths is rising, 12% global cases, 10% global deaths. #AustPH2021