NACCHO Sector News: 20 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

NACCHO MBS Webinar: Upcoming Changes to Bulk Billing Incentives in General Practice – On tomorrow!

The NACCHO MBS Webinar – ‘Upcoming Changes to Bulk Billing Incentives in General Practice,’ is on tomorrow, Tuesday 21 October (4:00pm-5:00pm AEDT).

From 1 November 2025, the Bulk Billing Practice Incentive Program (BBPIP) will provide an additional 12.5% incentive payment on Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) benefits for BBPIP-eligible services.

This session by NACCHO and Australian Government Department of Health, Disability and Ageing will cover what these changes mean for ACCHOs, eligibility, and how they can benefit your practice and patients.

To register, go here.

Air Force sits down to chat about Indigenous health program in FNQ

The Royal Australian Air Force has embarked on its annual community health program in Australia’s top end. Exercise Kummundoo 2025 marks the 11th iteration of an annual month-long project in which RAAF personnel deliver health services to remote communities.

Delivered in partnership with the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO), the exercise runs from 1 October to 6 November. It supports the RAAF’s reconciliation commitments while contributing to better health outcomes in regional and remote Indigenous communities, including Cape York.

The 2024 exercise focused on the Kunnunurra region of WA. This year’s exercise will be centred on Mareeba with outreach services extending to Atherton and Kuranda.

NACCHO CEO Pat Turner emphasised the importance of community control in improving health outcomes.

“Through Exercise Kummundoo, the Air Force is walking alongside our sector, listening, learning, and contributing in practical ways that make a difference,” she said.

“This is how we strengthen trust, improve health, and create real opportunities for our communities.”

Read more here.

Exercise Kummundoo is designed to build closer ties between the Air Force and local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. Photo: ADF.

QIAHC Members Conference 2025 starts tomorrow!

The QAIHC Members’ Conference 2025 starts tomorrow in Gimuy (Cairns). It’s an opportunity for the sector to come together to connect, share learnings, and celebrate the strength of community control. The ACCHO sector is more than a health system; it is an expression of culture, of leadership, of purpose.

Over two days, Members, leaders and partners will gather to learn from each other, plan for the future, and strengthen our collective voice.

Visit the official conference website for all event information, session details and updates.

Image source: QAIHC

First Peoples Disability Network launches national survey to drive reform

First Peoples Disability Network, in partnership with Jumbunna Research UTS, has officially launched the Our Way: Strengthening First Nations Disability Sector survey.

The Network is inviting Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations (ACCOs), Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs), and both First Nations and non-Indigenous NDIS and disability service providers from across Australia to share their experiences.

FPDN Director of Strategy and Policy Tennille Lamb told National Indigenous Times the survey “is about listening deeply and making sure that support is culturally safe and community-led”.

“We know the incredible work happening in communities every day, often with limited resources,” she said.

“By sharing their insights, services will be helping to identify priorities, strengthen the sector, and drive the reforms we need for mob with disability and their families.”

The survey closes 15 November.

Read more here.

Image source: First Peoples Disability Network.

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.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 17 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

Register now for the 2025 NACCHO National Youth Conference!

This year’s National Youth Conference is taking place on Monday 8 December 2025 at the Royal Randwick Racecourse, Sydney on Bidjigal & Gadigal Country. The National Youth Conference will bring together up to 100 youth from around Australia to gain experience and exposure to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander sector on a national level.

During the conference the youth will engage in discussion, share their experience and learn from other peers from across the country. The conference will allow the youth to learn about informing policy, influencing change and provide a pathway so their voices are heard and represented by NACCHO throughout the sector.

The NACCHO Members’ Conference will follow on Tuesday 9 December and Wednesday 10 December. The Conference theme is Strength Comes from Community Control.

Register here.

World Immunisation Day ACCHO Video Competition

World Immunisation Day’s coming up and that means… ACCHOs, it’s your time to shine! We want to see your most creative, cheeky, and clever ideas to get community rolling up their sleeves.

Create a fun, 90-second video that shows how we can Fab Jab & Roll Up, Show Up, Power Up for a stronger, healthier mob. Sing it, rap it, dance it, yarn it, act it, whatever gets the message out and makes people smile.

We will select a winning ACCHO from each category:

  • Best Community Voice
  • Best Storytelling/Narrative
  • Best Original Song/Performance
  • Best Humour/Comedy
  • Best Youth-Led Video
  • Most Innovative Approach

Winners will receive tickets, flights and accommodation to the 2025 NACCHO Members’ Conference.

Submissions close 1 November!

Submit your entry via: immunisations@naccho.org.au

QAIHC Members’ Conference Keynote: Our future workforce – TAIHS Showcase

At the QAIHC Members’ Conference 2025: Led by Culture, Driven by Purpose, Dr Katherine (Kathy) Anderson, CEO of the Townsville Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporation for Health Services (TAIHS), will showcase how community control and investment in people are driving workforce success.

Dr Anderson will explore the value of staff training and share the real outcomes TAIHS has achieved by supporting staff to undertake professional development and accredited training.

Supporting the discussion, Adam Stephen, Workforce Development Jurisdiction Manager, will connect these on-the-ground lessons to broader workforce strategies that help strengthen capability, leadership and cultural safety across Queensland’s ACCHO sector.

The QAIHC Members’ Conference is taking place Wednesdaay 22 October at the Cairns Convention Centre. View the full agenda and register here.

Image source: QAIHC

The Beautiful Shawl Project is coming to Rumbalara Aboriginal Co-Operative

From 20-25 October, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women can access free breast screens on board the Breast Screen Victoria mobile screening van at Rumbalara Aboriginal Co-operative in Mooroopna.

Every person who screens will receive a Beautiful Shawl to wear during the screening and take home afterwards. This year’s Goolum Goolum shawl was designed by Yorta Yorta artist, April Atkinson.

Describing her artwork, April says, “My art piece represents a Yorta Itjumatj Bayi which means healthy breast in the Yorta Yorta language. The middle symbol represents the nipple and areola, and also represents women sitting. The brown stems and pink flowers that flow off the nipple represent the veins and ducts of a woman’s bayi (breast). The strong blossom of the flower shows how strong women are within their bodies and the flowers that have not yet blossomed are the new beginnings ready to grow. And finally, the wiggled lines along the border and behind the nipple and ducts represents the stretch marks that many women are blessed to have.”

Image source: VACCHO

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.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 16 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

‘No understanding’: The extreme cost of living crisis affecting Australia’s most remote communities

It’s just before dusk and a warm breeze is blowing off the Gulf of Carpentaria, carrying the voices of the Yunkaporta family in Wik Mungkan across the top of the scrub. Bare-footed and waist-high in the grass, they collect what looks like clumps of bird’s nests. This is not a traditional practice, but a more contemporary way to make ends meet.

The Yunkaportas, just like many other families in Aurukun, are collecting grass seeds to sell to mining giant Rio Tinto. The scene is peaceful but freighted with symbolism; they stuff the seeds into reusable shopping bags, and most of the money they earn will be spent on groceries. As Eloise Yunkaporta watches on with her baby daughter nestled on her hip, she says the cost of living crisis is hitting her community hard.

“A weekly shop would cost me about $1,000 for only seven or eight bags of shopping,” she says.

“I do my shopping for the whole family, all the meat and vegetables, fruit … the basic needs for our household and [the cost] just blows my mind.”

Read the full article.

Members of the Wik community in Aurukun set out to gather seeds during the dry season. (ABC News: Billy Cooper)

Members of the Wik community in Aurukun set out to gather seeds during the dry season. (ABC News: Billy Cooper)

I’m a mother of five and a world champion. I refuse to let trauma define me

Shantelle’s story is one of strength. The proud Barkindji and Ngiyampaa woman says some people prefer to see her as a victim.
After 17 years, less than 15 per cent of Closing the Gap targets are on track to be met. Karla Grant hosts this special NITV Insight, asking what’s working to improve First Nations peoples’ lives? Watch episode Closing the Gap on SBS On Demand.

Growing up on Barkindji Country, I was a proud Aboriginal girl with mixed heritage whose identity was constantly challenged. My childhood was filled with paradoxes and intersections; connection and belonging in one breath, hardship in the next. But there were safe people and places anchoring me — my nan, Elders, aunties and uncles, country, culture, and community-run spaces.
Swimming at the local swimming pool with my siblings and cousins, and spending time by the river on Country are some of my strongest childhood memories. It was also from the water — a place of safety, guidance and Dreaming — where I first felt my ancestors call to me as a child. So, when I faced challenges growing up, I knew I carried a compass far older and stronger than any colonial system.

Read the full article.

Three-time jiu-jitsu world champion Shantelle Thompson says she refuses to be a 'trauma token'. Source: SBS

Three-time jiu-jitsu world champion Shantelle Thompson says she refuses to be a ‘trauma token’. Source: SBS

Federal government puts states, territories on notice over failure to close the gap for First Nations peoples

Indigenous Australians Minister Malarndirri McCarthy has called out Queensland and the Northern Territory for their high incarceration rates of First Nations people as she outlines plans to impose penalties on states and territories failing to close the gap.

“The rising rates of incarceration and the early deaths still of First Nations people demand our country’s full attention, and we must do our utmost to make sure we meet those targets,” she told the ABC.

“There is no doubt that Queensland and the Northern Territory’s targets are alarming, in particular the Northern Territory around the high incarceration rates of First Nations people, in particular youth.”

Read the full article.

Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy says the rate of young people being locked up in the Northern Territory is "alarming".

Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy says the rate of young people being locked up in the Northern Territory is “alarming”. (ABC: Matt Roberts)

‘He rode and ran to freedom’: Remembering Gunditjmara Elder Alby Clarke

WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised the following story contains the name of a person who has died.

Alby Clarke, a respected Gunditjmara Elder known for his tireless advocacy through sport, has been remembered for a life defined by resilience, transformation and determination.

Mr Clarke entered the Dreamtime on 16 September 2025, aged 90.

Born in Melbourne in 1934, he moved to the Framlingham Aboriginal Reserve near Warrnambool with his family after his father’s death when he was 10. An active child, he cycled to collect supplies and later joined a travelling boxing troupe, competing at country shows across Victoria and New South Wales.

In his ’60s, Mr Clarke faced a serious health warning after being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Determined to change his future, he gave up alcohol, began exercising and set himself a new mission – to use sport to advocate for First Nations health and reconciliation.

Read the full story.

Gunditjmara Elder Alby Clarke, a champion for health and reconciliation through sport, passed away aged 90. (Image: Anthony Brady)

Gunditjmara Elder Alby Clarke, a champion for health and reconciliation through sport, passed away aged 90. (Image: Anthony Brady)

Innovative nurse-led clinics boost healthcare access in regional Australia

A new healthcare initiative in regional New South Wales is expanding, after successfully demonstrating how nurse-led clinics can improve access to care while reducing pressure on overstretched general practitioners and emergency departments.

A pilot program, led by Murrumbidgee Primary Health Network, saw over 25 nurses deliver chronic disease management and preventative healthcare across 18 general practices in Wagga Wagga and surrounding areas from October 2024 to May 2025. The Primary Health Network has been commissioned to run the strategy again, with 28 practices set to take part.
Operating in a region facing critical health workforce shortages and poorer health outcomes than metropolitan areas, the nurse-led clinics provided care for chronic respiratory diseases, chronic heart failure, diabetes, First Nations preventive health, and healthy ageing in residential facilities.

Read the full article.

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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.

 

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 15 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

Now you can get medicines for less or free through the Closing the Gap PBS Program

The Closing the Gap (CTG) PBS Program helps Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and families access the medicines they need, wherever they live in Australia.

Once you’re registered, the price of most PBS medicines is reduced, and in some cases, they are even free. Registration is a one-time, for-life process. Yarn with your clinic, pharmacist or Aboriginal Health Practitioner to check your status and get registered.

Learn more here.

MBS Webinar – Changes Under the Better Access Initiative from 1 November 2025

ACCHOs, learn about upcoming changes under the Better Access Initiative from 1 November 2025.

Webinar: Wednesday 29 October | 10:30AM – 11:30AM AEDT

Register here.

From 1 November 2025, changes will be made to the Better Access to Psychiatrists, Psychologists and General Practitioners through the Medicare Benefits Schedule (Better Access) initiative. This includes the removal of some Mental Health treatment items and access to the Mental Health Treatment Plan through the patients mymedicare practice or their usual medical practitioner.

To help ACCHOs understand the program changes, we invite you to attend a Webinar hosted by NACCHO in collaboration with the Department of Health, where we will provide further details and answer your questions about these changes and how it will affect your patients.

We encourage all ACCHOs to attend so that you are better prepared for the changes with the removal of item numbers under the Better Access program. The webinar will specifically focus on ACCHOs and we are encouraging services to submit questions in advance relevant to your organisation.

Get ready to sing, sparkle, and celebrate at the 2025 NACCHO Members’ Conference Karaoke Night!

The 2025 NACCHO Members’ Conference Karaoke Night will take place on Wednesday, 10 December, the final night of the Members’ Conference.

This year’s theme is ‘Mardi Gras’ and is all about celebrating inclusion, pride, and the strength of our NACCHO family. It’s a night to express yourself, connect with others, and have a deadly time doing it.

Bring your pride, your people, your best moves, and your loudest vocals for a night that celebrates who we are together.

Prizes for Best Performance and Best Dressed, so bring your A-game (and maybe a little glitter).

Register now.

Australian Society of Ophthalmologists urges government to close the Indigenous eye health gap

The Australian Society of Ophthalmologists has called on the federal government to urgently address the widening gap in eye health, as new figures reveal First Nations people are still three times more likely to experience vision impairment and six times more likely to suffer moderate vision loss than other Australians.

Released ahead of World Sight Day, the Australian Eye and Ear Health Survey – prepared by the Centre for Vision Research, Westmead Institute for Medical Research on behalf of the AEEHS Consortium – reveals that despite measurable progress, eye health outcomes for First Nations peoples continue to lag far behind the national average, particularly in remote and regional communities where access to ophthalmic care is limited.

Read more here.

Images taken throughout an outreach trip to the Northern Territory. (Image: IRIS)

ABC New Breakfast shines spotlight on Notre Dame’s Kimberly Centre for Remote Medical Training

Last week, ABC News Breakfast brought national attention to a powerful, community-driven solution to Western Australia’s regional healthcare crisis, broadcasting live from The University of Notre Dame Australia’s Broome Campus.

Broadcasting from the dedicated teaching lab of the Kimberley Centre for Remote Medical Training (KCRMT), ABC journalist Emma Rebellato spoke with staff and students from the Doctor of Medicine program about how this innovative initiative is addressing the critical shortage of doctors in regional, rural, and remote WA.

The KCRMT launched in January 2025 and is WA’s first fully regionally based medical school and one of the most remote full medical programs in the world. It was established to train doctors in the region, for the region—embedding students in local communities from day one and offering a unique, hands-on learning experience that fosters long-term commitment to rural practice.

Alyssa Monte, who previously worked with the Kimberley Aboriginal Medical Services on an Indigenous smoking program, said she fell in love with the region and plans to stay long-term.

“It’s been amazing to be part of something so meaningful. I’ve seen firsthand the challenges in accessing healthcare here and I want to be part of the solution,” she said.

Read more 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.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 13 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

Air Force, NACCHO partnership supports Indigenous health in Far North Queensland

The Royal Australian Air Force is visiting Mareeba, Queensland, from 1 October to 6 November for Exercise Kummundoo 2025. The initiative will deliver essential health services and deepening ties with local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities across Far North Queensland.

Now in its 11th year, Exercise Kummundoo is a community engagement initiative delivered in partnership with the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO). The program supports Air Force’s reconciliation commitments while contributing to better health outcomes in regional and remote Indigenous communities.

NACCHO CEO Pat Turner AM, emphasised the importance of community control in improving health outcomes.

“Through Exercise Kummundoo, the Air Force is walking alongside our sector, listening, learning, and contributing in practical ways that make a difference. This is how we strengthen trust, improve health, and create real opportunities for our communities,” Ms Turner said.

Read more here.

Chief of Air Force Air Marshal Stephen Chappell, DSC, CSC, OAM (right) and National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation Chairperson Donnella Mills formalise a renewed Memorandum of Understanding between the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) and NACCHO.

Help shape the new Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peak Body for Family, Domestic and Sexual Violence – Survey deadline extended

You now have until 17 October to help shape the new National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peak Body for Family, Domestic and Sexual Violence.

Find out more and take the surveys now, here.

Your expertise – whether in response, prevention, early intervention or advocacy – is crucial in building a Peak Body that genuinely serves our communities and sector needs.

Understanding consultation fatigue, previous consultations have been used as a starting point. Specific feedback is now being sought on the Peak Body’s operational model and priorities. These surveys, together with a series of online workshops and sector engagement, will help shape how family violence is collectively addressed in our communities.

Image source: Coalition of Peaks

Ballarat Aboriginal Co-op becomes first ACCO to lead early years management in Victoria

The Victorian Government has announced the establishment of the first Aboriginal Community-Controlled Organisation (ACCO) to operate as an Early Years Management (EYM) authority.

The Ballarat and District Aboriginal Co-operative (BADAC) has been officially registered as the state’s first ACCO EYM.

BADAC currently oversees kindergartens at Perridak Burron in Brown Hill, Yirram Burron in Sebastopol, and Yaluk Burron in Ballan, providing culturally inclusive early learning programs to local families.

“We are very proud of the Early Years centres that we have established and the growth within the community over the past five years,” BADAC chief executive Karen Heap said.

“Becoming the first ACCO EYM enables us to guide, support and inspire other ACCOs across the state, ensuring Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families and children are supported in Early Years Education.”

Read more here.

Universities Australia welcomes more places for First Nations medical students

Universities Australia has welcomed the federal government’s decision to remove caps on Commonwealth Supported Places for First Nations medical students through the Education Legislation Amendment (Integrity and Other Measures) Bill 2025.

“If passed by the Parliament, it will be a really important reform that will change the lives of First Nations students, their families and communities, as well as our health system,” Universities Australia, Chief Executive Officer, Mr Luke Sheehy said this week.

The number of First Nations students studying medicine continues to grow, with 489 enrolled in 2024; a 17 per cent increase since 2021, including 124 new students.

“The growth in First Nations medical student numbers shows what’s possible when governments and universities work together to expand opportunity and support success,” Mr Sheehy said.

Read more here.

Indigenous medical school graduates celebrating, 2025.

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.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 10 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

Remote Aboriginal Communities at High Exposure Risk from Pilbara Measles Outbreak

Aboriginal Health Council of Western Australia (AHCWA) & Pilbara Aboriginal Health Alliance (PAHA) Joint Media Statement

Western Australia’s remote Aboriginal communities are currently at high risk of measles exposure, with 47 cases confirmed Statewide in 2025, compared with only six cases last year.

All Pilbara residents and travellers are being urged to check their measles vaccination status after eight cases linked to a community outbreak were confirmed in Port Hedland, South Hedland, and Karratha. New exposure sites continue to be identified as the virus begins to spread locally within the region, not just via transmission from overseas travellers.

The Aboriginal Health Council of Western Australia’s Public Health Medical Officer Dr Caitlyn White said stopping the highly contagious measles outbreak was essential to ensuring the health of our communities, especially in areas where people live close together or where vaccination rates are lower.

“Measles is a highly contagious airborne virus that can stay in the air for up to 30 minutes after an infected person leaves a room. It can cause serious complications, including pneumonia and brain inflammation, and up to one-third of cases may require hospital care,” Dr White said.

Vaccination is the best way to protect yourself. Anyone born after 1965 who has not received two documented doses of a measles-containing vaccine should speak to their local clinic or health professional as soon as possible. If you are unsure about your vaccination history, you are eligible for a free measles vaccine, as extra doses are not harmful. Children at 12 and 18 months old can also receive a free vaccine as part of their routine childhood vaccination schedule.

Read more here.

Image source: AHCWA

Register now for the 2025 NACCHO Members’ Conference!

Join us on Bidjigal and Gadigal Country from Monday 8 December – Wednesday 10 December 2025 at the Royal Randwick Racecourse, Sydney for the NACCHO Members’ Conference, National Youth Conference, and AGM.

This year’s theme, “Strength Comes from Community Control,” celebrates the power of our mob coming together to share knowledge, connect, and shape the future of community-controlled health.

Registrations close 30 November.

For more information and to register, go here.

Indigenous leaders call for more mechanisms to reach Closing the Gap targets

With progress towards some Closing The Gap targets slowing, or even worsening, the Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy has floated the idea of penalising state and territory governments.

While all state and territory governments committed to improving outcomes for First Nations Australians, there are few mechanisms to hold their progress to account.

The latest Closing the Gap report from July revealed only four out of 19 targets are on track to be met, with the NT being the worst performing jurisdiction in the country.

ABC NewsRadio’s Sarah Morice spoke with Catherine Liddle, the CEO of SNAICC – the National Voice for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children.

Listen here.

Catherine Liddle. (ABC News: Xavier Martin)

Kambu Health Members Elders Group

This week, Kambu Health Members Elders Group were back out at the Laidley Family Wellbeing Service Arts and Crafts room – the room was alive with yarns, laughter, storytelling, and some deadly sing-alongs to their favourite country tunes.

The group supports Elders through offering social connection, cultural engagement, emotional and health wellbeing support, outings, guests speakers and activities.

See more here.

Image source: Kambu Health

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.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 9 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

Cheaper groceries continue to reach remote NT communities under federal subsidy scheme

More than 50 remote stores across the Northern Territory now have access to cheaper groceries under the federal government’s Low-Cost Essentials Subsidy Scheme.

The initiative, announced last month, has now enrolled 100 remote community stores across Australia. It reduces the cost of 30 staple items — including fresh and canned produce, nappies, and toilet paper — helping to bring prices closer to those in cities.

According to the government, communities such as Croker Island in the north, Aputula in the south, and Atitjere in the east are among those benefiting from lower grocery prices, with remote consumers saving up to 50 per cent on these essentials.

The scheme is overseen by the National Indigenous Australians Agency and implemented by Outback Stores, a not-for-profit Commonwealth company.

Minister for Indigenous Australians, Malarndirri McCarthy, said the federal government had promised cost-of-living relief, “and that’s exactly what we’re delivering in remote communities across the Northern Territory”.

Read the full article.

Malarndirri McCarthy (left) and Marion Scrymgour.

Malarndirri McCarthy (left) and Marion Scrymgour.

Supporting families through stillbirth and miscarriage

The Albanese Government has provided $3.2 million over four years to Red Nose Australia to deliver the ‘Healing Through Community’ project, supporting families through stillbirth and miscarriage.

Each year in Australia, more than 110,000 families experience the heartbreak of stillbirth or miscarriage.

Healing Through Community resources support stillbirth and miscarriage bereavement care services for First Nations families, multicultural families, refugee and migrant communities, women and families living in rural and remote areas, and women younger than 20 years.

While any pregnancy can result in stillbirth or miscarriage, rates remain high for women from these communities.

The project was co-designed with health professionals and communities to ensure culturally safe and practical resources. It provides referral pathways for women, tools for local and national support, and powerful video stories from people with lived experience. These resources validate grief, amplify community voices, reduce stigma, and support training and awareness for the health workforce.

Read the full article.

High Mental Health Burden in Indigenous Young People

A recent Headspace survey found that 59 per cent of First Nations young people (aged 12-25) reported ‘high or very high’ psychological distress. Experts and those with lived experience were not surprised, attributing the confronting statistic to generational trauma, the ongoing impacts of colonisation, and systemic factors like racism, climate anxiety, and food insecurity.

Wiradjuri person Ley Laupama called the severe distress rate “believable,” given the struggles faced by their community. Despite the high levels of distress, Headspace noted an encouraging trend: more young people are actively seeking mental health support. The organisation is focusing on providing culturally safe and effective environments to meet this growing demand.

Read the full article.

Image: Headspace.

Image: Headspace.

‘A substantial new direction’: Construction of Aboriginal Child and Family Centre begins

Aboriginal families in Western New South Wales will soon have increased access to early learning and health screening after construction began on a new Aboriginal Child and Family Centre in Broken Hill.

The project is being delivered in partnership with the local Maari Ma Health Aboriginal Corporation, which was awarded the contract following a competitive open tender process.

Designed to provide integrated, culturally appropriate and needs-based services for Aboriginal families and children, the NSW Government said Aboriginal Child and Family Centres (ACFC) also operate as community hubs, providing universal early learning services for all families, alongside dedicated health and community spaces.

Maari Ma CEO, Richard Weston, said the Centre will support Aboriginal families in the Broken Hill region.

“Maari Ma is proud to be in partnership with the Department of Communities and Justice in the establishment of a new Aboriginal Child and Family Centre in Broken Hill—a major new initiative launched in our 30th anniversary year,” Mr Weston said.

“The centre will provide a culturally grounded space focused on early childhood education, development and family wellbeing.

“This is a substantial new direction for Maari Ma, and one that goes to the heart of our purpose—supporting the growth and development of Aboriginal children and their families.”

Read the full article.

Broken Hill City Council Mayor Tom Kennedy, NSW Member for Barwon Roy Butler, Maari Ma CEO Richard Weston and NSW Minister for Families and Communities, and Minister for Disability Inclusion, Kate Washington.

Broken Hill City Council Mayor Tom Kennedy, NSW Member for Barwon Roy Butler, Maari Ma CEO Richard Weston and NSW Minister for Families and Communities, and Minister for Disability Inclusion, Kate Washington. (Image: Roy Butler MP/Facebook)

 

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.

 

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 8 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

Now you can improve patient care with lifelong CTG PBS registration

The CTG PBS Co-payment Program improves access to all PBS-listed medicines for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. All doctors, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioners, and their authorised delegates can register patients in HPOS, a one-time, lifelong registration that follows patients across care settings. Noting assessment must occur by a PBS prescriber or an Aboriginal Health Practitioner.

Go here to learn practical steps and tips to embed CTG PBS into everyday practice, including primary care, community pharmacy, hospitals, and remote services.

NACCHO MBS Webinar – Upcoming Changes to Bulk Billing Incentives in General Practice

ACCHOs, learn about upcoming changes to bulk billing incentives in general practice. The webinar by NACCHO and Australian Government Department of Health, Disability and Ageing on Tuesday 21 October (4:00PM – 5:00PM AEDT) will cover what these changes mean for ACCHOs, eligibility, and how they can benefit your practice and patients.

From 1 November 2025, the Bulk Billing Practice Incentive Program (BBPIP) will provide an additional 12.5% incentive payment on Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) benefits for BBPIP-eligible services.

We want to hear from you: The webinar will focus on ACCHOs, and we encourage services to submit questions in advance.

Register here.

Celebrating Fiona’s Journey at AMS Redfern

AMS Redfern is proud of Fiona Cayanan, who has graduated from her studies to become an Aboriginal Health Practitioner.

Two years ago, Fiona saw a role for an Aboriginal Health Worker come up at AMS Redfern and she says it is everything she thought it would be and more.

“I love this community… the patients and doctors are amazing, there is so much compassion and understanding.”

Alongside her role as an Aboriginal Health Worker, AMS Redfern has been supporting Fiona to achieve her Certificate IV in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Primary Health Care Practice.

“It is the most awesome thing I have ever done!

“What I’ve enjoyed so much about the course is Aboriginal people teaching us in class, Aboriginal mob all supporting each other… it is always so exciting learning about culture, new subjects, new medical procedures – knowing that if I need to care for our patients I can do it!”

Read more here.

Image source: AMS Redfern

2025 National Rural and Remote Health Awards finalists announced

Conceived by Rural Health Pro and supported by Rural Doctors Network (RDN), the Awards form part of a commitment to celebrating and supporting the health care professionals who serve remote and rural communities – including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities – throughout Australia.

This year’s finalists include Suicide Prevention Team, Central Australian Aboriginal Congress, NT (Excellence in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Healthcare), and Courtney Smith-Garbutt, Bullinah Aboriginal Health Service NSW (Rising Star in Rural/Remote Health).

For the full list of finalists, go here.

Image source: Rural Health Pro

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.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 7 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

CSIRO report highlights need for First Nations-led approach to AI in healthcare

Scientists from CSIRO, Australia’s national science agency, together with First Nations partner organisations, have found that artificial intelligence (AI) has potential to improve healthcare in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. However, its safe and effective use must be guided by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices and knowledges.

Aboriginal man from Iningai Country in Western Queensland and CSIRO Research Scientist and lead author Dr Andrew Goodman said current frameworks for AI development and application tended to be overly general and insufficiently detailed in relation to cultural diversity.

“In Australia, this has resulted in a gap in understanding of how AI can serve Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples,” Dr Goodman said.

The Artificial Intelligence for Healthcare in Australian First Nations Communities: Scoping Project to Explore Relevance addresses this gap. The scoping project engaged 53 leaders, clinicians, researchers, and health service providers across four workshops between 2023 and 2025.

“Although these are early findings, this report provides a critical starting point for how to build responsible AI systems in technology such as apps and data collection to improve Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander healthcare outcomes,” said Dr Goodman.

The consultations identified three critical priorities for responsible AI use in First Nations health:

  • Building AI health literacy and cultural appropriateness by ensuring communities understand how AI works, what data it uses, and how it can support day-to-day care.
  • Protecting First Nations data sovereignty by guaranteeing that health data is held, governed, and used under the custodianship of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations.
  • Supporting self-determination by placing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations at the centre of AI design, implementation, and oversight.
  • These findings underscore the importance of embedding cultural knowledge in the design of AI systems.

Read the full article.

Family support service to keep Mid West and Gascoyne children safe at home

A vital service aimed at keeping children safe and reducing the number of WA youth entering out-of-home care is changing hands.

The Intensive Family Support Service, funded by the Department of Communities, will soon be delivered by MercyCare in partnership with Bundiyarra Aboriginal Community Aboriginal Corporation.

The program, which will slowly be rolled out from October 20, will offer in-home, practical help to families facing significant challenges, including poverty, housing instability and limited access to services.

Under the initiative, up to 45 families in Geraldton, Carnarvon, Meekatharra and nearby towns will receive intensive support each year over the next five years.

MercyCare’s general manager of youth, wellbeing and accommodation services Suzanne Caren said the program was designed to address the unique pressures affecting regional families in WA.

“Many families here are navigating remote living, housing shortages, unemployment and limited access to childcare and essential services,” she said.

“These challenges don’t just affect parents, they directly impact children’s safety, wellbeing and development. Without the right support, families can become isolated and overwhelmed and that’s when children are most at-risk of entering care.”

Read the full article

Suzanne Caren is MercyCare's general manager of youth, wellbeing and accommodation.

Suzanne Caren is MercyCare’s general manager of youth, wellbeing and accommodation. Credit: Jessica Antoniou/Kalgoorlie Miner

Racism a major issue in healthcare: RACGP Health of the Nation

Almost one third of GPs witnessed racism towards patients in the health system in the past year, according to the RACGP’s 2025 Health of the Nation report.

The nationwide survey of more than 2400 RACGP members also found that around two in 10 GPs personally experienced racism from a patient within their practice during that time, while one in 10 personally experienced racism from a colleague.

RACGP President Dr Michael Wright said these figures, along with separate statistics showing 30% of GPs have observed racism towards patients in the broader health system, are symptoms of a larger systemic issue.

“Racism in the health system is an issue that affects healthcare workers and patients alike. It is not something we can ignore, and it is certainly not something that will fix itself,” he said.

“These findings make it very clear that both action and resources are needed to tackle systemic racism in the health system, including general practice.

“The message is unmistakeable: Racism is bad for people’s health, and patients and GPs must be protected from it.”

Dr Wright said the RACGP has taken steps to address racism, such as implementing an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultural and health training framework to support culturally safe care, but called for wider action to eliminate racism across the health system.

Read the full article.

$5.5million First Nations Heritage Grants Program funds cultural preservation

A program designed to transfer knowledge from elders to younger generations and document cultural sites in the Kimberley has received a $200,000 funding boost.

The Wunambal Gaambera Aboriginal Corporation, located in the far north Kimberley, will use the grant from the State Government’s First Nations Heritage Grants Program to conduct cultural workshops and document significant cultural sites across the Wunambal Gaambera Country.

This vast region covers 2.5 million hectares of land (graa) and sea (wundaagu) and is part of the Uunguu Indigenous Protected Area, a Category VI IUCN Managed Resource Area, which is declared and managed by the Wunambal Gaambera people.

Minister for Indigenous Australians, Senator Malarndirri McCarthy, said the funding highlighted the Government’s commitment to recognising and preserving the cultural importance of First Nations sites across the nation.

“The Albanese Government is dedicated to enhancing the recognition of First Nations cultural heritage at World and National Heritage-listed places,” she said.

“Our country is rich in natural and culturally significant sites that are crucial for First Nations peoples. These locations need protection, and we are proud to work alongside Traditional Owners to ensure this happens.”

Read the full article.

Wunambal Gaambera Aboriginal Corporation, Uunguu Rangers completed a week of mapping and monitoring balguja (dugong) and jala (seagrass) in the Uunguu Indigenous Protected Area.

Wunambal Gaambera Aboriginal Corporation, Uunguu Rangers completed a week of mapping and monitoring balguja (dugong) and jala (seagrass) in the Uunguu Indigenous Protected Area. Credit: Supplied by Wunambal Gaambera

 

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.

 

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.

NACCHO Sector News: 3 October 2025

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health News

The NACCHO Sector 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.

World Immunisation Day ACCHO Video Competition

World Immunisation Day’s coming up and that means… ACCHOs, it’s your time to shine! We want to see your most creative, cheeky, and clever ideas to get community rolling up their sleeves.

Create a fun, 90-second video that shows how we can Fab Jab & Roll Up, Show Up, Power Up for a stronger, healthier mob. Sing it, rap it, dance it, yarn it, act it, whatever gets the message out and makes people smile.

We will select a winning ACCHO from each category:

  • Best Community Voice
  • Best Storytelling/Narrative
  • Best Original Song/Performance
  • Best Humour/Comedy
  • Best Youth-Led Video
  • Most Innovative Approach

Winners will receive tickets, flights and accommodation to the 2025 NACCHO Members’ Conference.

Submissions close 1 November!

Submit your entry via: immunisations@naccho.org.au

Deadly video below by Mulungu Health Service.

First Nations menopause resources

The Jean Hailes First Nations menopause booklet has been developed for First Nations women and covers what is menopause, when and why it happens, changes in periods, symptoms and after menopause. Order free copies for your ACCHO using code: FNWMM25.

Learn more here.

Image source: Jean Hailes

Why Indigenous health workers should apply for this important scholarship

Named in honour of the late Dr Arnold ‘Puggy’ Hunter, a widely-respected leader in improving the health of Indigenous people who served as inaugural National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) chair and led a list of other councils and groups, the scholarship offers cultural support, mentorship and other elements in addition to financial backing for students.

Recipients have access to $15,000 per year for full-time study, or $7,500 part-time, over the duration of their studies and training in a range of qualifications at universities, TAFE, higher education provided and registered training organisations.

This includes primary health, allied health, medicine, dentistry, nursing, midwifery and medicine.

Applicants are not required to currently enrolled in course so long as they intend to study in the coming year.

Online applications are open until October 30.

Read more here.

Image source: Indigenous Allied Health Australia (IAHA)

Australian Digital Health Agency Webinar

The Australian Digital Health Agency (the Agency) invites you to join the Agency Update Webinar on Thursday, 23 October 2025, held between 1pm – 3pm AEDT.

The Agency Update Webinar is an opportunity for representatives across the digital health ecosystem to come together and hear about the Agency’s progress on a wide range of digital health initiatives. The agenda will include a welcome from CEO, Amanda Cattermole, as well as some exciting topics such as Real Time Prescription Monitoring, the Share by Default Mandate, and the Capability Action Plan.

A live Q&A will be incorporated into the agenda, providing an opportune time to submit any burning questions you would like answered from the Agency’s leading business areas.

If you are interested in joining the Webinar, please click here to register.

Should you have any questions regarding the Webinar, please contact the Partnerships & Education Team via engagement@digitalhealth.gov.au.

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.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au and we will feature it in the news.

Email us your story with some images to: NACCHOCommunicationsandMedia@naccho.org.au
and we will feature it in the news.