| Project: East Arnhem Healthy Skin
Project |
CRCAH Project No.
HS41
Administering organisation
Menzies School of Health Research
Project Leaders
Associate Professor Ross Andrews
Dr Christine Connors
Contact details
Dr Ross
Andrews
Tel: 08 8922 7668
Fax: 08 8927 5187
Email:
ross.andrews@menzies.edu.au
Partners involved
- Aboriginal communities in the East Arnhem region, NT
- Menzies School of Health Research
- Murdoch Children’s Research Institute
- NT Department of Health and Community Services (DHCS)
- Australasian College of Dermatologists
- University of Melbourne
- Rio Tinto Aboriginal Foundation
- Ian Potter Foundation
- CRC for Aboriginal Health
- Office of Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Health
(OATSIH).
CRCAH Program Manager
Arwen
Pratt
|
Project summary:
The East Arnhem Healthy Skin Project (EAHSP) aimed to reduce the
prevalence of scabies, skin sores and tinea in five remote
Aboriginal communities, as these conditions are endemic in children
aged under 15 years.
Skin infections are most commonly due to Group A streptococcal
bacteria. These have been linked with outbreaks of acute post
streptococcal glomerulonephritis (kidney disease) and the very high
rates of rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease. Indeed,
Indigenous Australians have one of the highest rates of rheumatic
heart disease and renal disease in the world. To reduce the
prevalence of skin infections the EAHSP conducted a comprehensive
healthy skin program that included annual mass community scabies
treatment days and routine screening and treatment of skin
infections.
Summary of outcomes:
- The chart audit component of the study identified a previously
undocumented burden of scabies and skin sores starting within the
first few months of life. As a result community workers have become
more involved with screening and education in the baby clinics as
well as continuing the work in the community.
- Skin sore prevalence reduced substantially over the three-year
study period from 46.1% in the first 18 months to 27.6% in the last
18 months. The reduction in skin sores was evident for all age
groups but remains unacceptably high.
- Scabies prevalence remained constant over the three-year study
period at 13.5%. Additional work undertaken with CRCAH support
showed low levels of treatment uptake were a contributing factor to
ongoing scabies transmission and suggest that this was probably
also the case during annual mass community scabies treatment
days.
- In households where there was a person with scabies, almost 10%
of susceptible individuals acquired scabies during a 4-week
follow-up period. There were very low levels of treatment uptake
reported among household contacts (44%), but those individuals who
did not acquire scabies were almost 6 times more likely to belong
to a household where everyone in the house had used the scabies
treatment cream.
- The study was the first to monitor tinea prevalence over time
in Aboriginal children in the NT finding an average monthly
prevalence of 15.3%.
Timeline:
The project was completed in
August 2007.
Publications:
Andrews RM, Kearns T, Connors
C, Parker C, Carville K, et al (2009). "A Regional
Initiative to Reduce Skin Infections amongst Aboriginal Children
Living in Remote Communities of the Northern Territory,
Australia". PLoS Neglcted Tropical Diseases 3(11):
e554. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0000554
In 2008/09 the Healthy Skin Project
Leaders and the CRC for Aboriginal Health updated the project's
healthy skin resources to raise awareness about the impact of skin
conditions in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities
throughout Australia, with the objective to support health services
and practitioners to recognise and treat skin conditions.
These resources went through a lengthy quality assurance process
to make sure lessons learnt from the research undertaken in the
East Arnhem region of the Northern Territory were transferred to a
national audience; to other Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
communities across Australia; to health services and to
government.
The Healthy Skin package - policy brief, Final
Report on the East Arnhem Healthy Skin project, and a
flipchart to support Aboriginal Health Workers and
health practitioners to recognise and treat skin conditions - was
disseminated in October 2009 to the community controlled health
sector and other organisations providing health services to
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, as well as government
and education.
- Healthy Skin
Policy Brief (August 2009) - pdf
The policy brief incorporates key findings from many years of work
by researchers and health practitioners within Menzies School of
Health Research, the Queensland Institute of Medical Research, and
the Murdoch Children's Research Institute at the University of
Melbourne. Key messages from the research highlight what worked,
what didn't, and recommendations for action.
- Flipchart:
Recognising & Treating Skin Conditions - pdf 2MB, 24 pages
- please note this contains photographs of skin conditions that
may be confronting to people who have not seen these before, and it
is not a publication for broad dissemination
The flipchart resource contains photographs of
skin conditions and is a valuable resource for Aboriginal Health
Workers, health practitioners and community workers to improve
recognition and treatment of skin conditions.
- East Arnhem
Regional Healthy Skin Project - Final Report 2008 - pdf
This report provides a summary of the project and contains monthly
data, results from the research and draws some conclusions from the
project which potentially supports other communities and
researchers to undertake similar initiatives to reduce skin
conditions.
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Page last updated 25.11.2009