Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*

INTRODUCTION: The perinatal period is a time when provision of responsive care offers a life course opportunity for positive change to improve health outcomes for mothers, infants and families. Australian perinatal systems carry the legacy of settler-colonialism, manifesting in racist events and int...

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Published in:Women and Birth
Main Authors: Hine, R, Krakouer, J, Elston, J, Fredericks, B, Hunter, S-A, Taylor, K, Stephens, T, Couzens, V, Manahan, E, DeSouza, R, Boyle, J, Callander, E, Cunningham, H, Miller, R, Willey, S, Wilton, K, Skouteris, H
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: ELSEVIER 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11343/310697
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spelling ftumelbourne:oai:jupiter.its.unimelb.edu.au:11343/310697 2024-06-02T08:06:37+00:00 Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families* Hine, R Krakouer, J Elston, J Fredericks, B Hunter, S-A Taylor, K Stephens, T Couzens, V Manahan, E DeSouza, R Boyle, J Callander, E Cunningham, H Miller, R Willey, S Wilton, K Skouteris, H 2023-02 http://hdl.handle.net/11343/310697 English eng ELSEVIER issn:1871-5192 doi:10.1016/j.wombi.2022.04.007 pii: S1871-5192(22)00074-9 Hine, R., Krakouer, J., Elston, J., Fredericks, B., Hunter, S. -A., Taylor, K., Stephens, T., Couzens, V., Manahan, E., DeSouza, R., Boyle, J., Callander, E., Cunningham, H., Miller, R., Willey, S., Wilton, K. & Skouteris, H. (2023). Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*. WOMEN AND BIRTH, 36 (1), pp.136-140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2022.04.007. 1878-1799 http://hdl.handle.net/11343/310697 CC BY-NC-ND https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 Journal Article 2023 ftumelbourne https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2022.04.007 2024-05-06T11:37:13Z INTRODUCTION: The perinatal period is a time when provision of responsive care offers a life course opportunity for positive change to improve health outcomes for mothers, infants and families. Australian perinatal systems carry the legacy of settler-colonialism, manifesting in racist events and interactions that First Nations parents encounter daily. OBJECTIVE: The dominance of a western risk lens, and conscious and unconscious bias in the child protection workforce, sustains disproportionately high numbers of First Nations infants being removed from their parents' care. Cascading medical interventions compound existing stressors and magnify health inequities for First Nations women. DESIGN: Critical discourse was informed by Indigenous ways of knowing, being and doing via targeted dialogue with a group of First Nations and non-Indigenous experts in Australian perinatal care who are co-authors on this paper. Dynamic discussion evolved from a series of yarning circles, supplemented by written exchanges and individual yarns as themes were consolidated. RESULTS: First Nations maternity services prioritise self-determination, partnership, strengths and communication and have demonstrated positive outcomes with, and high satisfaction from First Nations women. Mainstream perinatal settings could be significantly enhanced by embracing similar principles and models of care. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The Australian Anti-racism in Perinatal Practice (AAPP) Alliance calls for urgent transformations to Australian perinatal models of care whereby non-Indigenous health policy makers, managers and clinicians take a proactive role in identifying and redressing ethnocentrism, judgemental and culturally blind practices, reframing the risk narrative, embedding strength-based approaches and intentionally prioritising engagement and connectedness within service delivery. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations The University of Melbourne: Digital Repository Women and Birth 36 1 136 140
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Melbourne: Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftumelbourne
language English
description INTRODUCTION: The perinatal period is a time when provision of responsive care offers a life course opportunity for positive change to improve health outcomes for mothers, infants and families. Australian perinatal systems carry the legacy of settler-colonialism, manifesting in racist events and interactions that First Nations parents encounter daily. OBJECTIVE: The dominance of a western risk lens, and conscious and unconscious bias in the child protection workforce, sustains disproportionately high numbers of First Nations infants being removed from their parents' care. Cascading medical interventions compound existing stressors and magnify health inequities for First Nations women. DESIGN: Critical discourse was informed by Indigenous ways of knowing, being and doing via targeted dialogue with a group of First Nations and non-Indigenous experts in Australian perinatal care who are co-authors on this paper. Dynamic discussion evolved from a series of yarning circles, supplemented by written exchanges and individual yarns as themes were consolidated. RESULTS: First Nations maternity services prioritise self-determination, partnership, strengths and communication and have demonstrated positive outcomes with, and high satisfaction from First Nations women. Mainstream perinatal settings could be significantly enhanced by embracing similar principles and models of care. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The Australian Anti-racism in Perinatal Practice (AAPP) Alliance calls for urgent transformations to Australian perinatal models of care whereby non-Indigenous health policy makers, managers and clinicians take a proactive role in identifying and redressing ethnocentrism, judgemental and culturally blind practices, reframing the risk narrative, embedding strength-based approaches and intentionally prioritising engagement and connectedness within service delivery.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hine, R
Krakouer, J
Elston, J
Fredericks, B
Hunter, S-A
Taylor, K
Stephens, T
Couzens, V
Manahan, E
DeSouza, R
Boyle, J
Callander, E
Cunningham, H
Miller, R
Willey, S
Wilton, K
Skouteris, H
spellingShingle Hine, R
Krakouer, J
Elston, J
Fredericks, B
Hunter, S-A
Taylor, K
Stephens, T
Couzens, V
Manahan, E
DeSouza, R
Boyle, J
Callander, E
Cunningham, H
Miller, R
Willey, S
Wilton, K
Skouteris, H
Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*
author_facet Hine, R
Krakouer, J
Elston, J
Fredericks, B
Hunter, S-A
Taylor, K
Stephens, T
Couzens, V
Manahan, E
DeSouza, R
Boyle, J
Callander, E
Cunningham, H
Miller, R
Willey, S
Wilton, K
Skouteris, H
author_sort Hine, R
title Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*
title_short Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*
title_full Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*
title_fullStr Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*
title_full_unstemmed Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*
title_sort identifying and dismantling racism in australian perinatal settings: reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to first nations families*
publisher ELSEVIER
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/11343/310697
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation issn:1871-5192
doi:10.1016/j.wombi.2022.04.007
pii: S1871-5192(22)00074-9
Hine, R., Krakouer, J., Elston, J., Fredericks, B., Hunter, S. -A., Taylor, K., Stephens, T., Couzens, V., Manahan, E., DeSouza, R., Boyle, J., Callander, E., Cunningham, H., Miller, R., Willey, S., Wilton, K. & Skouteris, H. (2023). Identifying and dismantling racism in Australian perinatal settings: Reframing the narrative from a risk lens to intentionally prioritise connectedness and strengths in providing care to First Nations families*. WOMEN AND BIRTH, 36 (1), pp.136-140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2022.04.007.
1878-1799
http://hdl.handle.net/11343/310697
op_rights CC BY-NC-ND
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2022.04.007
container_title Women and Birth
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