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Wellbeing through culture: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with disability

Wellbeing though Cultural Participation: An affirmative strategy for the inclusion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with disability

 

Project Aims and Objectives:

The aims of the project were to:

The three core outcome objectives were:

A fourth objective contained within a related but discrete knowledge translation proposal was to:

A fifth process objective was to:

 

Project Team:

Project leaders: Professor Leanne Dowse and Dr Scott Avery
Project partners: Australian Bureau of Statistics
Administering organisation: University of New South Wales
Project timeline: 1 March 2018—31 May 2019

 

Methodology

  1. The project utilised a mixed methods approach to collect data on participation by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with disability in community and cultural events.
  2. Quantitative data on cultural and community participation was sourced from the 2014 National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey (NATSISS) dataset (ABS, 2016) and, in a process of research coproduction with the ABS, was delimited by self-identified disability status, state and regional attribute (metropolitan, inner regional, outer regional, remote and very remote).
  3. Qualitative data on cultural and community participation and its impact on the wellness of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with disability was sourced through semi-structured interviews.
  4. A final core activity of the project was the development of an interactive, online data visualisation tool through which community-based users could access data from the research according to their specification.

 

Project Findings

The findings from the research were:

 

Project Outcomes

Knowledge
  • Identified barriers and enablers to cultural participation for people with disabilities.
  • Showed the positive mental and physical health benefits of cultural participation.
Awareness
  • Conducted a workshop and public demonstration of data visualisation tool (30 participants plus live on-line streaming).
Behaviour
  • Made key recommendations for policy and practice changes to improve the health and wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with disabilities including:
    • That the social inclusion of people with disability continues to be developed as a discrete, affirmative strategy within an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing framework.
    • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander disability community-based organisations are resourced to design, promote and sustain inclusive cultural and community activities as a means to advance the wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with disability and other groups who experience social isolation.
    • Community organisations and service providers develop service protocols for embedding participation of people with disability as ‘business as usual’ within health promotion programs.
Skills
  • Built capacity within the First Peoples Disability Network (FPDN), an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community organisation, through increased participation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as researchers in an applied research project.
Project leader

Professor Leanne Dowse

Administering institution:

University of New South Wales

Completion date:

Expected May 2019