| CRCAH project No SD179 |
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Administering Organisation: Winnunga
Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service (WNAHS)
Project Leaders: Jodie Fisher, MRCSEWB
Graham Henderson, AIATSIS
Contact details: Graham Henderson
Ph: 02 6246 1167
Fax: 02 6249 7714
Email: graham.henderson@aiatsis.gov.au
Team members: Julie Tongs (overall leader),
Peter Sharpe, Ray Lovett, John Van den Dungen, Kerry Arabena,
Nerelle Poroch (lead researcher), Jilpia Nappaljari Jones, Leila
Smith, Steve Larkin, Mick Dodson, Katja Mikhailovich, Jo Victoria,
Jodie Fisher, Graham Henderson
Program Manager: Scott
Davis,
Social
Determinants of Health program
Partners Involved:
- WNAHS (lead agency)
- Muuji Regional Centre for Social and Emotional Wellbeing
(MRCSEWB)
- Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Studies (AIATSIS)
- National Centre for Indigenous Studies at the Australian
National University
- Healthpact Research Centre for Health Promotion and Wellbeing
at the University of Canberra
- The Connection ACT (a community peer support group for
Indigenous users and ex-users of drugs)
- CRCAH
- Funded by ACT Health Healthpact - $100,000
This project is endorsed as an in-kind project of the
CRCAH.
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Project Summary:
This project was initiated by the Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal
Health Service (WNAHS) in response to the construction of the
ACT’s first prison, the Alexander Maconochie Correctional
Centre, which was due for completion and to receive its first
inmates in 2008. Through its current work with Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander inmates at Goulburn and Cooma prisons in
NSW, and the Belconnen Remand Centre and Quamby Youth Detention
Centre in the ACT, WNAHS recognised the ACT prison opening as an
opportunity to improve the appropriateness and effectiveness of
health care delivery to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
inmates of custodial institutions.
The aim of this project was to develop a best practice model for
the delivery of a holistic health care service to Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander inmates of the Alexander Maconochie
Correctional Centre and to their families. WNAHS wanted to have
this model implemented in the ACT, and further to provide a solid
basis to better inform health care practices for Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander inmates, their families, and Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander health service providers in the wider
custodial environment throughout Australia.
Project Outcomes:
This project formally concluded on August 1st 2007 with the
official launch by the ACT Chief Minister of the final main report,
community report, and a brochure at WNAHS in Canberra.
Outcomes include:
- During the project, a literature review was completed,
co-researcher training was undertaken, community consultation
undertaken, interviews and focus groups completed, and a main
report and community report prepared.
- The project highlighted the lack of national and international
literature on Indigenous prison health.
- Strong working relationships were developed between
Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service (WNAHS) and ACT
Corrections and ACT Health during the course of the research study
through the Winnunga Prison Health Steering Committee and ACT
Health Committee investigating prisoner health needs in the new
Alexander Maconochie Centre in the ACT. The
Centre will open in August 2008.
- The research collaboration between WNAHS and its Research
Partners (AIATSIS, Muuji Regional Centre for Social and
Emotional Wellbeing, The Australian National University,
Healthpact Research Centre for Health Promotion and Wellbeing
University of Canberra, The Connection, and the CRCAH) in the
Winnunga Prison Project lead to WNAHS presenting its key
findings at the WHO Commission on the Social Determinants
of Health Conference on
Indigenous Social Determinants of Health in Adelaide
in 2007, the CRACH/PHAA/AIATSIS
Aboriginal Prisoner Health Industry Roundtable in
Canberra in 2007, and a partnership in a 2008
NHMRC Capacity Building Grant Application for
Australia-wide research into Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander prisoner health.
- Former Aboriginal prisoners and their families were respondents
in the Winnunga Prison Health Study; and
- ACT Health are currently reviewing the findings of the Winnunga
Prison Health Study with the view of implementing recommendations
arising from the research.
The 5 recommendations from the study relate to:
- Incorporation of the Winnunga Holistic Health Care Prison Model
(WHHCPM) into the ACT Health prison services delivered at the
Alexander Maconochie Centre;
- The establishment of a prisoner health communication network
between Winnunga and other Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal
organisations;
- The establishment of a monitoring and evaluation program for
the implementation of the WHHCPM – assessing process, impact,
and outcomes of the model;
- Transference of this new knowledge and understanding by the
CRCAH to the health and justice systems in other jurisdictions
throughout Australia; and
- Further studies be undertaken to help overcome the current lack
of an evidence base for Aboriginal prison-related issues in the ACT
and Australia.
Project Implementation:
The project milestones
included:
- Developing
the research plan;
- Securing
$100,000 external funding support from Healthpact ACT
Health;
- Ethical
approval by the WNAHS Board, MRCSEWB Steering Committee, and
AIATSIS Research Ethics Committee;
- Recruitment
of researchers;
- Implementation
of research;
- Evaluation;
- Report
preparation; and
- Knowledge
transfer.
Timeline: 2006 - 2007
Project publications and
presentations:
Reports (available from Winnunga prison health pages):
- Nerelle Poroch, with support from Julie Tongs, Peter Sharp,
Mick Dodson, Steve Larkin, Katja Mikhailovich, Jodie Fisher, Ray
Lovett, Kerry Arabena, John Van den Dungen, Jilpia Nappaljari
Jones, Leila Smith, Jo Victoria, and Graham Henderson, You do
the crime, you do the time: Best practice model of holistic health
service delivery for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander inmates
of the ACT prison, June 2007, published by Winnunga Nimmityjah
Aboriginal Health Service (ISBN 978-0-9803945-0-4), Canberra
[Project Report]
- By the people who freely gave their stories, You do the
crime you do the time: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
experience of prison life and afterwards, June 2007, published
by Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service (ISBN 978 0
9803945-1-1), Canberra [Community report]
Journal articles:
- Tongs, J., Chatfield, H. and Arabena, K. 2007, ‘The
Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service Holistic Health Care
for Prison Model’, Aboriginal & Islander Health
Worker Journal 31 (6), 6-8
- Tongs, J., Sharp, P., Poroch, N., Fisher, J., Lovett, R.,
Arabena, K., Larkin, S., Mikhailovich, K. and Henderson, G. 2008,
‘Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health: A case-study
of prison health in Australia’, Social Science &
Medicine, submitted for publication
Conference presentations:
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[Page last updated 5 June 2008]