Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander

Workshop on health career pathways for young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Men

In partnership with the Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance, the FCMHW NT Division co-facilitated a workshop for young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander males on the 22 October 2021 to encourage them to think about pursuing career pathways into the community health sector. Men are currently under-represented in the NT health workforce, including nursing and allied health.

FCMHW Trainee Jahdai Vigona co-lead the workshop and shared his own story of becoming a health researcher to showcase how the young men could play a part in helping people to heal and keep their communities healthy and socially and emotionally well.

Link to news article

Understanding the Nexus between Alcohol Consumption, Social and Emotional Wellbeing, and higher Education Outcomes among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Males in Australia

Understanding the Nexus between Alcohol Consumption, Social and Emotional Wellbeing, and higher Education Outcomes among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Males in Australia

Understanding the nexus between alcohol consumption, social and emotional wellbeing, and higher education outcomes among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander males in Australia
H Gupta, JA Smith, JJ Fleay, CPB Lesiter, K Canuto. International Journal of Mens Social and Community Health 4 (1), e28-e37.
Contact: Gupta Himanshu

Enough Talk Time for Action e-Bulletin #1. A community focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander male health

Enough Talk Time for Action e-Bulletin #1. A community focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander male health

1st Edition of the bi-monthly Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Male Health e-Bulletin released, featuring news and information from across the country focussing on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander males.

Lancet letter calls for greater intersectionality within men’s health to advance the discipline

Lancet letter calls for greater intersectionality within men’s health to advance the discipline

Implications of critical race theory for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men's health.
Merlino A, Canuto K, Smith JA. Lancet Glob Health. 2021 Jun;9(6):e756. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(21)00100-5.
PMID: 34019832
Contact: Kootsy Canuto

Introducing Douglas Clinch - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Men’s Health

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Men’s Health

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Men’s Health

We are very pleased to welcome Mr Douglas (Dougie) Clinch as a member of the Centre.

Dougie is a Ngarrindjeri man through his mother, whose traditional lands include the lower Murray River, western Fleurieu Peninsula, and the Coorong in South Australia; and through his father he is a Badimaya man of the Yamatji people, whose lands include the Mid-west region of Western Australia. He was born and raised on Kaurna Country and has lived in the southern suburbs of Adelaide for much of his life.

Dougie has worked as a Project Officer at the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute (SAHMRI) for nearly four years, spending most of that time with the SA Aboriginal Chronic Disease Consortium in the Aboriginal Health Equity unit, also known as Wardliparingga

Towards the end of 2020 Dougie began his transition over to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Men’s Health program, joining Dr Kootsy Canuto’s team as a dedicated Engagement and Project Officer.

Despite most of the work still being ahead of him, Dougie has been busy engaging with stakeholders of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men’s health to both understand the landscape across South Australia and building meaningful relationships with all stakeholders, including most importantly, communities.

Dougie will provide Aboriginal leadership in brokering and maintaining social and health service sector relationships during co-design, implementation and evaluation activities of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Men’s Health research program. This will require ongoing and regular engagement  with Aboriginal communities across South Australia. In addition, Dougie will contribute to co-designing strategies to increase and improve engagement and utilisation  of primary health care services by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men in South Australia.

Contact: Douglas Clinch

Translation of knowledge into practice: building the wellbeing of Aboriginal men and boys

Translation of knowledge into practice: building the wellbeing of Aboriginal men and boys

The aim of this program is to translate ecological maps of risk and protective factors for wellbeing in Aboriginal men and boys into health promotion and prevention activities in SA through trialling the use of an ecological framework and knowledge interface processes as tools to improve the wellbeing of First Nations men and boys.

The program will be led by Aboriginal academics and informed by Indigenous knowledge of health and wellbeing. Further, community engagement will empower communities to participate in the development of resources to support the social and emotional wellbeing of their men and boys.

Contact: Tamara Mackean