- SHPA meets up with NACCHO on Close the Gap Day
- Delivering dialysis in remote communities webinar
- World Indigenous Cancer Conference
- Qld students complete anti-tobacco program
- Sector Jobs
- Key Dates – 22 March: Lynch Syndrome Awareness Day; World Water Day; 24 March: World Tuberculosis Day
- Events and training
The NACCHO Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News is a platform we use to showcase the important work being done in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health, focusing on the work of NACCHO, NACCHO members and NACCHO affiliates.
We also share a curated selection of news stories that are of likely interest to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health sector, broadly.
SHPA meets up with NACCHO on Close the Gap Day
NACCHO and The Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia (SHPA) have collaborated for years to achieve medicines access equity for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people across all healthcare settings, especially in hospitals. In recent years, NACCHO and SHPA have made the case for public hospital pharmacies to be included in the Closing the Gap PBS Co-payment program, so that they can supply important medicines to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people when discharged from hospitals while removing cost barriers. In 2023, the Australian Senate agreed to this, and a recent Department of Health and Aged Care report also supported this. NACCHO and SHPA will continue to collaborate to see this policy change be adopted and implemented.
On National Close the Gap Day, SHPA met up with NACCHO to discuss other programs and policies that impact medicines access and use for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. SHPA was also proud to provide a copy of its Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) to NACCHO, launched last year, which proudly describes SHPA’s commitment to engage and collaborate with NACCHO to strengthen our shared policy positions.
You can find more detail about the CTG PBS Co-payment program on the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care website here.
Delivering dialysis in remote communities webinar
From 4–5pm (Canberra time) Tuesday 26 March, NACCHO is hosting a webinar with staff from Purple House and Kimberley Renal Services to describe some key things to consider when establishing a dialysis unit for remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and give an opportunity to ask questions.
This is to support communities submitting an Expression of Interest for nurse-led dialysis units in remote communities as part of the Better Renal Services commitment. This commitment is for up to 30 four-chair dialysis units for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples with end-stage kidney disease.
You can register for the webinar here.
World Indigenous Cancer Conference
The third World Indigenous Cancer Conference took place in Naarm (Melbourne) this week, 17–20 March. It was a packed house, with around 540 very enthusiastic attendees from Australia, Canada, France, NZ, Sweden, the UK, and the US, who have chosen to work to achieve equity in cancer outcomes for their Peoples.
Conference attendee Waulu McCartney, a proud Wamba Wamba Wurundjeri woman from Victoria, said “I like working with my people – in health promotion, health awareness and their keeping information up to date so they can make informed decisions for their own care. It means a lot when you’re helping your own people.” McCartney shared her personal connection with cancer, motivating the work that she does as a project officer in chronic health with VACCHO, “I’ve had multiple family members that have had cancer in the past. My grandmother had lung cancer, my dad has had multiple skin cancers chopped out, my mum has had skin cancers chopped out, multiple family members that have passed away from cancer, had cancer or they are fighting cancer at the moment. It is big in community. People don’t talk about it but, once you ask the question, you realise how prevalent it is in community.”
Another conference attendee, Kiandra Brown, a Gunditjmara woman, is also a project officer in chronic health with VACCHO. Brown, who works on the Beautiful Shawl Project, a community-led initiative in breast screening for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women said, “I’ve grown up in the community, working with community and a lot of my family work in the health sector, and I have family affected by health issues so that motivates me to do this work. Working on the beautiful shawl and seeing the work that we do and the results of it, it’s that saying ‘Aboriginal health in Aboriginal hands’ that just keeps me going.”
To view the Croakey Health Media article What is at the heart of our work to improve cancer outcomes? First Nations Peoples share stories and motivations in full click here.
Qld students complete anti-tobacco program
A total of 18 participants from Gympie State High School attended and successfully completed The Deadly Choices 6-week senior anti-tobacco program. North Coast Aboriginal Corporation for Community Health says it aims to “educate more young people in the coming school terms about the importance of tobacco awareness and the dangers of vaping, “We hope this program will further support out ongoing No Durri for This Murri campaign, which was been highly successful along the coast and is widely recognised across the state.”
The Deadly Choices Tobacco Education Program explores the historical journey of tobacco use, its acceptance, and its impacts on community. Promoting key behavioural change through education around smoking, is a way of empowering youth towards informed decision making and avoiding the harmful impacts of smoking and vaping.
It’s hoped graduates of the program will advocate against smoking among their peers and likewise be equipped to support peers, family and community members to start their quit journey. Deadly Choices envisions this program will lead to happier, healthier Mob, as well as creating smoke-free environments.
Learn more about the Deadly Choices Tobacco Education Program here.
Sector Jobs – you can see sector job listings on the NACCHO website here.
Advertising Jobs – to advertise a job vacancy click here to go to the NACCHO website current job listings webpage. Scroll down to the bottom of the page to find a Post A Job form. You can complete this form with your job vacancy details – it will then be approved for posting and go live on the NACCHO website.
Lynch Syndrome Awareness Day
Lynch Syndrome Awareness Day (LSAD) is held on 22 March every year. It is a day to honour all those affected, at risk, or who have a mutation that causes Lynch syndrome. Lynch syndrome (previously known as HNPCC – Hereditary Non-Polyposis Colon Cancer) is an inherited genetic mutation which gives people an increased risk of developing certain types of cancers throughout their lifetime.
Every person inherits genes from both their parents and Lynch syndrome is caused by a fault in a gene that normally functions to protect a person from getting cancer (known as the ‘mismatch repair’ genes). The ‘faulty’ gene increases a carrier’s risk of developing brain, colon, kidney, liver, skin, stomach, and uterine cancers. Where it runs in a family, Lynch syndrome can present itself as many different cancers across multiple family members.
People with Lynch syndrome, for example, have a 70-90% risk of developing bowel cancer. Around 30% of bowel cancer patients have a family history or genetic inheritance, both of which significantly increase a person’s risk of developing bowel cancer. If a person is diagnosed with Lynch syndrome their parents, children, and siblings have a 50% chance of having bowel cancer. Other blood relatives (grandparents, aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews) are also at increased risk. Identifying people that are carriers of Lynch syndrome allows for early and increased surveillance, the option of preventative surgery and the ability to determine increased cancer risk in the extended family.
You can find more information about Lynch syndrome here, and read a related AMA InSight+ article Lynch syndrome: the cancer risk nobody’s heard of here.
World Water Day
World Water Day is an annual United Nations observance day held on 22 March every year to highlight the importance of fresh water and promote the responsible use of water and access to safe water for everyone.
Water can create peace or spark conflict. When water is scarce or polluted, or when people have unequal, or no access, tensions can rise between communities and countries. More than 3 billion people worldwide depend on water that crosses national borders. Yet, only 24 countries have cooperation agreements for all their shared water. As climate change impacts increase, and populations grow, there is an urgent need, within and between countries, to unite around protecting and conserving our most precious resource. Public health and prosperity, food and energy systems, economic productivity and environmental integrity all rely on a well-functioning and equitably managed water cycle.
The theme of World Water Day 2024 is ‘Water for Peace’. When we cooperate on water, we create a positive ripple effect – fostering harmony, generating prosperity, and building resilience to shared challenges. We must act upon the realisation that water is not only a resource to be used and competed over – it is a human right, intrinsic to every aspect of life. This World Water Day, we all need to unite around water and use water for peace, laying the foundations of a more stable and prosperous tomorrow.
You can find more information about World Water Day here.
You can also read the following related articles:
- Heatwave and drought a dangerous mix for dialysis patients in remote communities – The Guardian here.
- Bottled water trucked to remote Ali Curung Aboriginal community as drinking water crisis continues – ABC News here.
- Delivering safe water to Aboriginal communities – Murdoch University here.
- Survey Reveals How Unsafe Tap Water Affects an Aboriginal Community in Australia – Northwestern University Institute for Policy Research here.
World Tuberculosis Day
World Tuberculosis Day is commemorated on 22 March every year to raise public awareness about the devastating health, social and economic consequences of tuberculosis (TB) and to step up efforts to end the global TB epidemic. The date marks the day in 1882 when Dr. Robert Koch announced that he had discovered the bacterium that causes TB, which opened the way towards diagnosing and curing this disease
The theme of World TB Day 2024 – ‘Yes! We can end TB!’ – conveys a message of hope that getting back-on-track to turn the tide against the TB epidemic is possible through high level leadership, increased investments, and faster uptake of new World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendations. Following the commitments made by Heads of State at the United Nations High Level meeting in 2023 to accelerate progress to end TB, this year’s focus shifts to turning these commitments into tangible actions.
To help countries scale-up access to TB preventive treatment, WHO will release an investment case on scaling up the roll out of TB preventive treatment.
You can find more information about World Tuberculosis Day on the WHO website here.
You can also read a related article Tuberculosis outbreak leads to 13 confirmed infections in remote South Australian communities here.
Free, specialised governance workshops for ACCHOs will be delivered in multiple locations across the country during 2024 and 2025.
Registrations are open now for Sydney and Perth:
- Sydney 19–20 March 2024
- Perth 16–17 April 2024
The program is delivered by legal experts and covers:
- Delegation of powers
- Finance for Boards
- Governance documents
- Managing conflicts of interest
- Managing risk
- Principles of good governance
- Structure and role of boards and sub-committees
To register, go here.
For more information, please contact NACCHO using this email link.










































































