Multicultural Perspectives on Health and Wellbeing/Ethnicity and chronic diseases
Culture represents shared beliefs, values and understandings. Culture also provides a basis for understandings of health, illness and lifestyle to its members’. Australia as we know it today, is a migrant society with close to 30% of Australia’s population born overseas. Australia also faces a significant burden from chronic diseases. Some ethnically diverse groups face higher rates of certain chronic diseases when compared to the host Anglo-Australian population. It is thus essential to consider why might this be the case and what may the best strategies be to tackle these issues. Should we take a “one-size fits all” approach or should services be tailored to specific cultural needs? These are some of the aspects that will be examined in this lecture.
Lecture
editActivity
edit- Review of lecture, "Ethnicity, culture and chronic disease"
- Discussion on Healthy Immigrant Effect and Risk factors to diseases
- Online quiz changes
- Discuss submission of presentation
- Readings
- Group work
Resources
editReadings
edit- Bhopal, R. (2004). Glossary of terms relating to ethnicity and race: for reflection and debate. J Epidemiol Community Health 2004;58:441-445
- Gupta, S., Aroni, R., Lockwood, S., Jayasuriya, I., and Teede, H. (2015). South Asians and Anglo Australians with heart disease in Australia. Aust. Health Review , DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/AH14254
- Bhopal, R. and Donaldson, L. (1998) White, European, Western, Caucasian, or what? Inappropriate labeling in research on race, ethnicity, and health. American Journal of Public Health 88(9): 1303–1307.
- Fine, L. Phiogene, G.S., Gramling, R., Coups, E. and Sinha, S. (2004) Prevalence of multiple chronic disease risk factors: 2001 National Health Interview Survey. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 27 (2):18–24
- Kennedy, S., McDonald,J.T. and Biddle, N (2006) The healthy immigrant effect and immigrant selection: evidence from four countries. SEDAP Research Program, 67. http://www.carleton.ca/sppa/wp-content/uploads/chesg-mcdonald.pdf
- Liu, J., Davidson, E., Bhopal, R., White, M., Johnson, M., Netto, G., Deverill, M. and Sheikh, A. (2012) Adapting health promotion interventions to meet the needs of ethnic minority groups: mixed-methods evidence synthesis. Health Technol Assess 16 (44): 1-469
Videos
editEthnicity and health - a video play list compiled by Sabrina Gupta
Websites
edit- National Health Priority Areas: http://www.aihw.gov.au/national-health-priority-areas/
- Australian Bureau of Statistics: http://www.abs.gov.au