Aremella Arratyenye-ileme: Doing It Right
Project aims
To improve research knowledge exchange, generation and translation leading to Aboriginal community members, Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services and their Board members having more control over health research, its outcomes and benefits in central Australia.
Objectives
- Assist Aboriginal community members, Central Australian Aboriginal Congress health service and Board members to improve their understanding of health research processes and outcomes.
- Generate research knowledge by and for Aboriginal community and Congress Board members.
- Empower community members in understanding research and its benefits.
- Implement knowledge translational activities that can improve service delivery.
- Provide employment and leadership opportunities for Aboriginal researchers.
- Support Congress Board by providing guidelines to assess, record and monitor knowledge translation activities within Congress.
- Achieve best practice in meaningful partnered research that will benefit community-controlled services and clients and be shared with other ACCHS.
Project team
Project Leader: Dr Bronwyn Silver
Project partners:
- Menzies School of Health Research
- University Centre for Rural Health, Sydney University
Administering organisation: Central Australian Aboriginal Congress Aboriginal Corporation
Project timeline: 31 December 2017—30 April 2019
Methodology
Project progressed using a community-based participatory research method and generated research knowledge to be used by both Congress and the community.
- Literature review and investigation of Aboriginal community engagement in research to ensure the research project builds on existing evidence and experience.
- ‘Both ways’ approach used to generate knowledge between Aboriginal community controlled health services, community members and members and health researchers via a ‘Research Roadshow’/community forum.
- Translation of NHMRC into local language and development of a ‘Working Together’ guideline that outlines Congress’ expectations of research partners when conducting research.
- An Integrated quality improvement framework to audit all Congress Board approved research projects: this included a retrospective audit of the Congress database which has over 70 research projects (20 completed and 50 current), identification of missed opportunities for knowledge translation policy from the research projects on the database and development of three case studies on current research projects near completion.
Project findings
The project found that the new knowledge generated empowered the Board members in understanding research, monitoring research, and ownership of project outcomes. While this project is just the beginning of Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations taking control of the Aboriginal health research agenda, it is anticipated that there will be long term benefits through the extension of research protocols specific to central Australia that all researchers abide by when engaging communities, implementing research, as well as conducting and negotiating use of research outcomes.
Project outcomes
Knowledge |
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Awareness |
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Behaviour |
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Skills |
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