4.2 Article

Using community-led development to build health communication about rheumatic heart disease in Aboriginal children: a developmental evaluation

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1753-6405.13100

Keywords

community‐ led development; developmental evaluation; health communication; Indigenous Knowledges; rheumatic heart disease

Funding

  1. Australian Government under the Strong Communities for Children Program
  2. Australian Government Department of Health

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High rates of ARF and RHD among Aboriginal children in northern Australia highlight the need for effective health communication strategies that incorporate Indigenous Knowledge and respect for culture. Teaching children about RHD in their home languages led to positive changes in attitudes and responses, facilitated by community-led development and collaborative discussions among language speakers. A community interagency collaboration focused on prevention of RHD was initiated, emphasizing the importance of collective work and local Indigenous Knowledge.
Objective: A high prevalence of acute rheumatic fever (ARF) and rheumatic heart disease (RHD) among Aboriginal children in northern Australia is coupled with low understanding among families. This has negative impacts on children's health, limits opportunities for prevention and suggests that better health communication is needed. Methods: During an RHD echocardiography screening project, Aboriginal teachers in a remote community school created lessons to teach children about RHD in their home languages, drawing on principles of community-led development. Access to community-level RHD data, previously unknown to teachers and families, was a catalyst for this innovative work. Careful, iterative discussions among speakers of four Aboriginal languages ensured a culturally coherent narrative and accompanying teaching resources. Results: The evaluation demonstrated the importance of collective work, local Indigenous Knowledge and metaphors. As a result of the lessons, some children showed new responses and attitudes to skin infections and their RHD treatment. Language teachers used natural social networks to disseminate new information. A community interagency collaboration working to prevent RHD commenced. Conclusions and implications for public health: Action to address high rates of RHD must include effective health communication strategies that value Indigenous Knowledge, language and culture, collaborative leadership and respect for Indigenous data sovereignty.

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