Creating fairer systems: How can we work more effectively with Indigenous communities to improve outcomes?

(Part One): How Dreamtime stories can be used as an approach to communicate between healthcare providers and First Nations consumers Dr Marjad Page will discuss how Dreamtime stories can be used as an approach to communicate between healthcare providers and First Nations consumers. Dreamtime stories...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Page, M, Shanley, Dianne, Lyndon, M
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10072/424070
Description
Summary:(Part One): How Dreamtime stories can be used as an approach to communicate between healthcare providers and First Nations consumers Dr Marjad Page will discuss how Dreamtime stories can be used as an approach to communicate between healthcare providers and First Nations consumers. Dreamtime stories are not just stories but are writings with cultural importance for the betterment of a community. By using the language and structure of a Dreamtime story, vital information is presented in a culturally meaningful form so health providers can creatively engage and educate First Nations families. Health providers can unpack new metaphors hidden within the narrative, explaining challenging health concepts in a way that is memorable. The story therefore becomes a tool to facilitate feedback and intervention for children throughout the child’s healthcare journey. This session will provide a detailed example of how a Dreamtime story was especially co-designed to support children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) in remote primary care but ended up providing a blueprint for service delivery that empowered primary healthcare to effectively identify any child who was developmentally not on track. The project provides an exemplar for true partnerships between community Elders, health practitioners, and university researchers. Healthcare outcomes from implementing this co-designed model of care will be presented. Marjad Page, Kambu Health; Australia Dianne Shanley, Griffith University; Australia (Part Two): Māori Health and Equity: The Māori Health Authority and lessons from COVID-19 There are persistent inequities for Māori (indigenous people of Aotearoa/New Zealand) in healthcare access, healthcare quality, and overall health outcomes compared with non-Māori New Zealanders. Māori are less likely to access high quality healthcare, suffer a higher prevalence of long-term conditions, and have higher COVID-19 case rates, hospitalisations, mortality, and inequitable COVID-19 vaccination coverage. This presentation will ...