Addressing the knowledge gap of Indigenous public health: reflections from an Indigenous public health graduate

2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 110-118
Author(s):  
Natasha Lee

AbstractThe current agenda in public health training in higher education works to produce well-trained public health professionals. Operating within a western pedagogical framework it aims to build a cohort of critical and analytical thinkers, skilful problem solvers and extraordinary communicators across key disciplines in health. Many graduates possess interdisciplinary specialities, skills and knowledge transferable within health and other sectors. Core competencies in the curricula, which notably does not currently include Indigenous health, are considered the foundational platform of theory and practical understandings of public health and the health system. Despite a framework that aims to produce health professionals capable of improving the health of the population as a whole; the lack of engagement with an Indigenous health criticality maintains a longstanding Australian public health tradition of failure when it comes to addressing the health disparities experienced by Indigenous people. As a recent Indigenous public health graduate with practical training and experience working in the public health system, I consider possibilities for decolonising the curricula through an Indigenist approach to health, including theories of transformative learning which could strengthen public health practice and in turn facilitate the changes necessary to improving Indigenous health outcomes.

2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dr. Saira Tariq

<p>With an emerging transformation in global health from ‘<em>diseases</em>’ to ‘<em>Health Systems</em>’, there is increased recognition that Health Systems need to be resilient and receptive to the accelerated demographic and epidemiological transition, posing unconventional health challenges. Health System strengthening is also crucial for progressing towards Universal Health Coverage which is an intrinsic attribute of health related SDGs (2030).</p><p>      In light of contemporary threats to health security, Health systems are becoming more complex and placing supplementary demands on the Health Workforce which is one of the key components of health systems. Pakistan has been categorized as one of 57 countries that are facing an HRH (Human Resource for Health) crisis i.e. that its health workforce is below the threshold level defined by WHO, required to deliver the essential health interventions to attain the Sustainable Development Goals (UN) by 2030.<sup>1</sup> The crisis is complex and is related not just to the quantity but the quality, efficiency and effectiveness of the health work-force.</p><p>      In a series of studies about Health Professionals education, the landmark 1910 Flexner Report<sup>2</sup> triggered revolutionary reform in Health Professionals education by consolidating modern science into the curricula at universities, equipping the health professionals with the knowledge that contributed to enhanced life expectancy and improved quality of life in the 20<sup>th</sup> century. Marking the centenary of the reform initiative, the Lancet Commission on ‘Education of Health Professionals for the 21<sup>st</sup> Century’ accented the fact that professional medical education especially in developing countries, has not kept pace with emerging challenges because of obsolete and inert curricula that has led to production of valueless and ill equipped graduates who have not been able to address the contextual challenges effectively.<sup>3</sup></p><p>      According to the commission some of the impinging issues include weak leadership to improve health system performance, persistent mismatch of competencies to individual patient and population needs, limited technical focus without broader contextual understanding, predominant clinical orientation at the expense of primary health care, intermittent episodic encounter<br /> of the patient with clinic rather than a ‘continuum of care’ approach etc.</p><p>      The Commission draws attention to ‘three generations’ of Health Professional education reform in the past century starting with a science based curriculum in the first generation (start of the 20<sup>th</sup> century) followed by problem based instructional innovation (mid-century). Authorities emphasize that a third generation of reform is now required  that employs a systems approach for improving health system performance and adapts core professional competencies to specific contexts while drawing on global knowledge. They maintain that actualization of this vision will require a series of instructional and institutional reforms, which should be guided by  transformative learning which is  the highest of three successive levels, moving from in-formative to formative to transformative learning. In-formative learning is about acquisition of knowledge and skills with the objective to produce experts. Formative learning is about socializing students around values to produce professionals. Transformative learning is about developing leadership attributes; its purpose being production of enlightened and cultivated change agents. Effective education builds each level on the previous one. As a valued outcome, transformative learning involves three fundamental shifts: from fact memorization to searching, analysis, and synthesis of information for decision making; from seeking professional credentials to achieving core competencies for Effective teamwork in health systems; and from non-critical adoption of educational models to innovative adoption of global resources to address local priorities.<sup>3</sup></p><p>      Pursuance of these reforms requires leadership from within the academic and professional communities, increased investments and stewardship followed by shared learning by supporting evaluation and strengthening of research to build the knowledge base about which innovations work in which settings. It is critically important to subscribe to the vision and recommendations of the Commission for development of cadres of skilled, competent and motivated health professionals who can in due course, be agents of change within their domains and work towards addressing the daunting health challenges of our times.</p><p>(Adapted from The Lancet Commission on ‘Education of Health Professionals for the 21<sup>st</sup> Century, 2010)</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 270-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Devrim Ozdemir ◽  
Pamela A. Duffy

The mission of public health programs is to prepare competent public health professionals for a dynamic workforce. One way to accomplish this mission is to design curricula that support learners’ competency attainment in today’s public health practice. The purpose of this article is to demonstrate the actual steps taken to ensure that graduates meet public health core competencies. The major stages of this process are (a) backward design of the curriculum, (b) front-end analysis of the curriculum, and (c) back-end analysis of the curriculum. The backward design stage aligns a course curriculum with the core competencies. Front-end analysis provides evidence that the overall program curriculum aligns with the core competencies. The back-end analysis provides evidence of learners’ competency attainment. All three phases embed principles of continuous improvement to benefit the curriculum through a feedback-loop mechanism. Challenges, opportunities, and future directions for academic leaders of curriculum program development are discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 73S-80S ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle Carvalho ◽  
Lisa C. McCormick ◽  
Laura M. Lloyd ◽  
Kathleen R. Miner ◽  
Melissa Alperin

Experiential learning links knowledge to real practice through seasoned mentor support, professional reflection, and hands-on experience in authentic work environments. While academic public health programs seek to train the future workforce, the current workforce has a critical need for training as well. The Region IV Public Health Training Center’s Pathways to Practice Scholar program gives public health students the opportunity to apply knowledge to competency-based experiences while fulfilling the current workforce’s short- and long-term human resource needs. Placements are offered in all eight states of the region to broaden opportunities for both agencies and student scholars. On completion of the program, scholars are required to submit an executive summary, reflection statement, photos of the experience, and a draft abstract suitable for submission to a professional conference. Since 2015, 36 scholars have been placed in positions across Region IV, 11 in states other than those of their home universities. Students were placed at state, local, and tribal health departments; area health education centers (AHECs); and other agencies (e.g., primary care settings), and the most common work plan domains selected by scholars were analytic/assessment, policy development/program planning, and leadership/systems thinking skills. Scholars’ perceived confidence increased across all domains with the highest increases in financial planning/management and cultural competency. Program implementation and evaluation findings are described, including types of projects, differences in confidence in performing competency domains, and confidence and interest in working with underserved populations. Evaluation findings indicate that the Region IV Public Health Training Center scholars increased their confidence in performing practice competencies while providing support for public health agencies serving underserved populations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 122 (1) ◽  
pp. 118-131
Author(s):  
Bob Oram

For the UK struggling to deal with the Covid-19 pandemic, the experience of Cuba’s Ministry of Public Health over the past six decades provides the clearest case for a single, universal health system constituting an underlying national grid dedicated to prevention and care; an abundance of health professionals, accessible everywhere; a world-renowned science and biotech capability; and an educated public schooled in public health. All this was achieved despite being under a vicious blockade by the United States for all of that time.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
F Tahzib

Abstract Background Public health practitioners regularly face moral dilemmas in their daily practice but they are not well prepared to deal with them. Yet, from an ethics perspective, educational programmes are often inadequate. Rather, there is a need to better understand public health ethical competencies and to develop education and training in public health ethics (PHE). Objectives This presentation will share findings and learning from an ESRC funded research by the UK Faculty of Public Health in collaboration with the Universities of Southampton and Bristol around the nature of competency in PHE and law. Our leading question is: What are the key ethical and legal knowledge, skills, values and attitudes necessary for PHE and law as a professional competency of the public health workforce (PHW)? Results We created a working list of what the competencies should look like based on the material from the competency library, comments from a panel of practitioners, experts which we convened, and own analysis that reflects subject matter knowledge, expressed skill development requirements and personal work experience. These were organized within five areas which: (i) Awareness and Understanding, (ii) Engagement and Research, (iii) Analysis and Reasoning, (iv) Evaluation and Reflection and (v) Action and Advocacy. The five areas and various issues which they cover will be described, as well as reflection and learning from some key activities and initiatives in building competency and capacity. Conclusions There is need to appreciate the nature of competency of PHE and build capacity and competency of the PHW through education and training programmes as key element of public health training curricula. Key messages There are distinguishing features in teaching, learning and practice of PHE compared to clinical ethics. To implement PHE competencies into practice and in public health curricula requires better understanding of practice and the political mandate of public health.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne De Biasi ◽  
Megan Wolfe ◽  
Jane Carmody ◽  
Terry Fulmer ◽  
John Auerbach

Abstract Background and Objectives The public health system in America—at all levels—has relatively few specialized initiatives that prioritize the health and well-being of older adults. And when public health does address the needs of older adults, it is often as an afterthought. In consultation with leaders in public health, health care, and aging, an innovative Framework for an Age-Friendly Public Health System (Framework) was developed outlining roles that public health could fulfill, in collaboration with aging services, to address the challenges and opportunities of an aging society. Research Design and Methods With leadership from Trust for America’s Health and The John A. Hartford Foundation, the Florida Departments of Health and Elder Affairs are piloting the implementation of this Framework within Florida’s county health departments and at the state level. The county health departments are expanding data collection efforts to identify older adult needs, creating new alliances with aging sector partners, coordinating with other agencies and community organizations to implement evidence-based programs and policies that address priority needs, and aligning efforts with the age-friendly communities and age-friendly health systems movements. Results, and Discussion and Implications The county health departments in Florida participating in the pilot are leveraging the Framework to expand public health practice, programs, and policies that address health services and health behaviors, social, and economic factors and environmental conditions that allow older adults to age in place and live healthier and more productive lives. The model being piloted in Florida can be tailored to meet the unique needs of each community and their older adult population.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Lutz ◽  
M Pasche ◽  
K Zürcher

Abstract Background Climate change poses a number of threats and challenges to our societies and has direct impacts on human health. Raising awareness and training health professionals to sustainable development represents a major strategy in order to respond to climate challenges. This article describes a teaching experience conducted in the context of a Certificate of Advanced Studies (CAS) in public health at the University of Lausanne, where students have been trained to sustainable development, through theoretical lessons and practical exercises. Objectives The integration of the topic of sustainable development in the teaching of health promotion and prevention to the students of the CAS in public health aimed to foster students' knowledge and competences in relation to this emerging topic. The main objective was to transmit concepts, methods and practical resources allowing them to incorporate sustainability into everyday health promotion and prevention practices. Results Health promotion and sustainable development share common goals and methodologies. The experience of teaching sustainability to public health students shows that these two topics can be easily integrated within a public health training, if teachers provide students with a clear theoretical and methodological framework, allowing them to make the appropriate connections between the two fields. Social determinants of health, intersectorial action and multilevel governance represent key topics that teachers can address with students in order to show the connections between public health and sustainability. Conclusions As stated in the 2019 Lancet Countdown on health and climate change, climate change is both a threat and an opportunity for our societies. While it puts health systems and professionals under considerable pressure, it also represents an opportunity to innovate and transform professional training and practices, and generate new knowledge and know-how. Key messages Training health professionals to sustainable development represents a major strategy to respond to climate change and its health impacts. In order to integrate sustainable development in public health training, teachers should provide students with a clear theoretical and methodological framework.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 54-79
Author(s):  
Liping Bu

The Rockefeller Foundation (RF) was the first private organization to have systematically envisioned and practiced public health as a world system. The RF exerted extensive influence in disseminating medical science, public health practice and policies in the world. It set up similar public health institutions in many countries by working with national and colonial governments, empires of Europe and the United States, and the League of Nations Health Organization. This article focuses on the RF’s role in the development of modern health in China. It situates the discussion in the larger context of RF’s involvement in Asia. The RF made significant achievements in China primarily through the mechanisms of the International Health Board, the China Medical Board, and the extraordinary capabilities of John B. Grant. Drawing on archival data and recent research, this article examines the interactive work between RF officials, Chinese health professionals, and the Chinese government in standardizing medical science education and the training of health professionals by means of establishing Peking Union Medical College and the health demonstration stations. It shows how these programs and institutions ultimately helped shape up the creation of a national health system in China. This study sheds light on the long-term legacy of the RF in China and the implications of state medicine and medical efficiency for current global public health.


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