From Digital Mental Health to Digital Social and Emotional Wellbeing: How Indigenous Community-Based Participatory Research Influenced the Australian Government’s Digital Mental Health Agenda
This paper describes the first six years of a government-initiated project to train Indigenous health professionals in digital mental health (d-MH). It illustrates how community-based participatory research (CBPR) methods were used to enable this “top-down” project to be transformed into a ‘ground-u...
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doaj-6bd45194d33b4308ac7fd4e3294889ce2021-09-26T00:19:44ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1661-78271660-46012021-09-01189757975710.3390/ijerph18189757From Digital Mental Health to Digital Social and Emotional Wellbeing: How Indigenous Community-Based Participatory Research Influenced the Australian Government’s Digital Mental Health AgendaJames Bennett-Levy0Judy Singer1Darlene Rotumah2Sarah Bernays3David Edwards4University Centre for Rural Health, The University of Sydney, Lismore 2480, AustraliaUniversity Centre for Rural Health, The University of Sydney, Lismore 2480, AustraliaGnibi College of Indigenous Australian Peoples, Southern Cross University, Lismore 2480, AustraliaSchool of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney 2006, AustraliaUniversity Centre for Rural Health, The University of Sydney, Lismore 2480, AustraliaThis paper describes the first six years of a government-initiated project to train Indigenous health professionals in digital mental health (d-MH). It illustrates how community-based participatory research (CBPR) methods were used to enable this “top-down” project to be transformed into a ‘ground-up’ community-guided process; and how, in turn, the guidance from the local Indigenous community partners went on to influence the national government’s d-MH agenda. The CBPR partnership between five community partners and a university rural health department is described, with illustrations of how CBPR harnessed the community’s voice in making the project relevant to their wellbeing needs. The local Indigenous community’s involvement led to a number of unexpected outcomes, which impacted locally and nationally. At an early stage, the conceptual framework of the project was changed from d-MH to the culturally-relevant Indigenous framework of digital social and emotional wellbeing (d-SEWB). This led to a significant expansion of the range and type of digital resources; and to other notable outcomes such as successful advocacy for an Aboriginal-specific online therapy program and for a dedicated “one-stop-shop” d-SEWB website, <i>Wellmob</i>, which was funded by the Australian government in 2019–2021. Some of the implications of this project for future Indigenous CBPR projects are discussed.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/18/9757community-based participatory researchIndigenous Australianscommunity partnershipsdigital social and emotional wellbeingdigital mental healthAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
James Bennett-Levy Judy Singer Darlene Rotumah Sarah Bernays David Edwards |
spellingShingle |
James Bennett-Levy Judy Singer Darlene Rotumah Sarah Bernays David Edwards From Digital Mental Health to Digital Social and Emotional Wellbeing: How Indigenous Community-Based Participatory Research Influenced the Australian Government’s Digital Mental Health Agenda International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health community-based participatory research Indigenous Australians community partnerships digital social and emotional wellbeing digital mental health Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health |
author_facet |
James Bennett-Levy Judy Singer Darlene Rotumah Sarah Bernays David Edwards |
author_sort |
James Bennett-Levy |
title |
From Digital Mental Health to Digital Social and Emotional Wellbeing: How Indigenous Community-Based Participatory Research Influenced the Australian Government’s Digital Mental Health Agenda |
title_short |
From Digital Mental Health to Digital Social and Emotional Wellbeing: How Indigenous Community-Based Participatory Research Influenced the Australian Government’s Digital Mental Health Agenda |
title_full |
From Digital Mental Health to Digital Social and Emotional Wellbeing: How Indigenous Community-Based Participatory Research Influenced the Australian Government’s Digital Mental Health Agenda |
title_fullStr |
From Digital Mental Health to Digital Social and Emotional Wellbeing: How Indigenous Community-Based Participatory Research Influenced the Australian Government’s Digital Mental Health Agenda |
title_full_unstemmed |
From Digital Mental Health to Digital Social and Emotional Wellbeing: How Indigenous Community-Based Participatory Research Influenced the Australian Government’s Digital Mental Health Agenda |
title_sort |
from digital mental health to digital social and emotional wellbeing: how indigenous community-based participatory research influenced the australian government’s digital mental health agenda |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health |
issn |
1661-7827 1660-4601 |
publishDate |
2021-09-01 |
description |
This paper describes the first six years of a government-initiated project to train Indigenous health professionals in digital mental health (d-MH). It illustrates how community-based participatory research (CBPR) methods were used to enable this “top-down” project to be transformed into a ‘ground-up’ community-guided process; and how, in turn, the guidance from the local Indigenous community partners went on to influence the national government’s d-MH agenda. The CBPR partnership between five community partners and a university rural health department is described, with illustrations of how CBPR harnessed the community’s voice in making the project relevant to their wellbeing needs. The local Indigenous community’s involvement led to a number of unexpected outcomes, which impacted locally and nationally. At an early stage, the conceptual framework of the project was changed from d-MH to the culturally-relevant Indigenous framework of digital social and emotional wellbeing (d-SEWB). This led to a significant expansion of the range and type of digital resources; and to other notable outcomes such as successful advocacy for an Aboriginal-specific online therapy program and for a dedicated “one-stop-shop” d-SEWB website, <i>Wellmob</i>, which was funded by the Australian government in 2019–2021. Some of the implications of this project for future Indigenous CBPR projects are discussed. |
topic |
community-based participatory research Indigenous Australians community partnerships digital social and emotional wellbeing digital mental health Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/18/9757 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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