Aboriginal Health Program


Contact 
Andrew Morrison
Aboriginal Health Program
Email  Andrew Morrison
Tel. 8480 4610


Overview and local context

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health and Community Services Directory

Practice Incentives Program (PIP) Indigenous Health Incentive - Dec '09

Aboriginal Health Promotion and Chronic Care (AHPACC)

Resources


Overview and local context

The northern suburbs are home to Victoria's largest Aboriginal community.

Melbourne's north Indigineous population profile
2,436 people who identify as being Indigenous live in the northern suburbs.  (2001 Census)

  • Darebin 1058
  • Whittlesea 691
  • Hume 677

The Division is actively involved in supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health. Thus includes developing a state-wide directory of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community and health services, now available on-line (details below).

The Division works closely with the Aboriginal Community Elders Service (ACES); the Kookaburra Club, the Men's Shed and with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander programs at local community health services.

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Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health and Community Services Directory

Contact
Simone Morrison
Project Officer
Email  Simone Morrison

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Directory can be found at www.atsihealth.org

The Directory has been designed to be easy to use and accessible. It is the successor of a directory compiled by the Northern and North East Valley Divisions and the Victorian Aboriginal Health Service in the mid 1990s and has now been re-launched as a comprehensive state-wide directory.

It aims to give the community a list of services and resources to help both Indigenous and mainstream providers in referring Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander clients to local, culturally relevant services in both rural and urban areas of Victoria.

A holistic approach to health care is the basis for the directory. For this reason spiritual, cultural and social resources are included as well as health services.

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Practice Incentives Program (PIP) Indigenous Health Incentive

The new Practice Incentives Program (PIP) Indigenous Health Incentive will commence in May 2010. This incentive will support general practices and Indigenous health services to provide better health care to Indigenous Australians, including best practice management of chronic disease.

There will be three types of payments available through the PIP Indigenous Health Incentive:

  1. Sign-on payment
  2. Annual patient registration payments
  3. Outcomes payment

Click here to download the full information document.

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Aboriginal Health Promotion and Chronic Care (AHPACC)

Improving Aboriginal health and wellbeing through a partnership approach.

The Northern Division of General Practice has a long history of working in partnership with Aboriginal communities and agencies to improve the health and well-being of the community. The Aboriginal Health Promotion and Chronic Care (AHPACC) program is an initiative that can support, extend and build on the strength of this previous work.

Click here to download the AHPACC program outline.

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Resources

Austin Hospital Ngarra Jarra program outline: useful information on working with local Indigenous patients

The Ngarra Jarra program is back to support Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) patients, carers and families. Equally the program exists to assist GPs and practice staff in the referral of patients to the Austin (inpatient/outpatient). The program is there to provide a cultural safety net for ATSI patients throughout their treatment journey. The program employs 2 Aboriginal Hospital Liaison Officers (Suzanne Nelson and Robin Munro) who are available to help GPs with any referral protocols/issues relevent to Aboriginal people.

Relationships with Aboriginal People and Organisations - From the perspective of health services, this is the key to improving cultural safety and being able to make appropriate referrals, both to the primary health system and post discharge. From the perspective of Aboriginal people, these relationships are the basis for building confidence to attend hospital at an appropriate time and to feel safe to identify as an Aboriginal person.

This program has been absent for a period (prior to 2009) and is now operational again.

Contact details:
Suzanne Nelson Mon-Friday on Tel. 9496 5638 or call switch on Tel. 9496 5000 and pager 1864. Robin Munro Wed-Friday on Tel. 9496 5834 or pager 1865.

We encourage you to use the services of these hospital liaison staff who are dedicated to ATSI patients and the health professionals who treat them.

Click here to visit the Ngarra Jarra page of the Austin's website (NEW!! October '09)


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