Appropriate health promotion for Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities: crucial for closing the gap

Author:

Demaio Alessandro1,Drysdale Marlene2,de Courten Maximilian1

Affiliation:

1. School of Global Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

2. Indigenous Health Committee and Indigenous Health Unit, Monash University, Monash, Australia

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. It serves as a guide for community-focused health promotion practice to be built on and shaped by the respect for understanding and utilisation of local knowledge and culture. Culturally Appropriate Health Promotion is not about targeting, intervening or responding. Rather, it encourages health programme planners and policymakers to have a greater understanding, respect, a sense of empowerment and collaboration with communities, and their sociocultural environment to improve health. This commentary aims to examine and apply the eight principles of Culturally Appropriate Health Promotion to the Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander context. It proposes a widespread adoption of the framework for a more respectful, collaborative, locally suitable and therefore appropriate approach to Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health promotion.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference14 articles.

1. Demaio A. Local Wisdom and Health Promotion; Barrier or Catalyst. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 2008.

2. Taylor K, Guerin P. Health care and Indigenous Australians: Cultural Safety in Practice. Australia: Palgrave Macmillan; 2010.

3. Calma T. Closing the Gap: Campaign for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health inequality by 2030. Canberra, Australia; 2008.

4. World Health Organization. Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion. Ottawa, Canada: WHO; 1986.

5. Culturally appropriate health promotion: its meaning and application in Aboriginal communities

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