@article{3c4f4b636dad4a758b4fc8cc63125839,
title = "Strengths and limitations of a tool for monitoring and evaluating First Peoples' health promotion from an ecological perspective",
abstract = "Background: An ecological approach to health and health promotion targets individuals and the environmental determinants of their health as a means of more effectively influencing health outcomes. The approach has potential value as a means to more accurately capture the holistic nature of Australian First Peoples{\textquoteright} health programs and the way in which they seek to influence environmental, including social, determinants of health. Methods: We report several case studies of applying an ecological approach to health program evaluation using a tool developed for application to mainstream public health programs in North America – Richard{\textquoteright}s ecological coding procedure. Results: We find the ecological approach in general, and the Richard procedure specifically, to have potential for broader use as an approach to reporting and evaluation of health promotion programs. However, our experience applying this tool in academic and community-based program evaluation contexts, conducted in collaboration with First Peoples of Australia, suggests that it would benefit from cultural adaptations that would bring the ecological coding procedure in greater alignment with the worldviews of First Peoples and better identify the aims and strategies of local health promotion programs. Conclusions: Establishing the cultural validity of the ecological coding procedure is necessary to adequately capture the underlying program activities of community-based health promotion programs designed to benefit First Peoples, and its collaborative implementation with First Peoples supports a human rights approach to health program evaluation",
keywords = "Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, Determinants of health, Ecological, Evaluation, First Peoples, Health promotion, Systems, Public Health, Health Promotion/methods, Humans, Program Evaluation/methods, Ecology, Social Environment, North America, Cultural Competency, Social Determinants of Health, Human Rights, Environment, Australia, Oceanic Ancestry Group",
author = "Kevin Rowley and Joyce Doyle and Leah Johnston and Rachel Reilly and Leisa McCarthy and Mayatili Marika and Therese Riley and Petah Atkinson and Bradley Firebrace and Julie Calleja and Margaret CARGO",
note = "Funding Information: This work was funded by grants from the NHMRC (#1049086, #631947) and the Lowitja Institute, incorporating the Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health, a collaborative partnership partly funded by the CRC Program of the Commonwealth Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research. KR was supported by an NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship, and MC by an ARC Future Fellowship. We thank the members of the Health Promotion Tools, Resources and Training project Working Group for their helpful discussions and input – Christine Armit, Jenny Brands, Janya McCalman, Lyn O{\textquoteright}Donoghue, Nikki Percival, Komla Tsey. This work was made possible by the insights of our collaborating community leaders and health promotion practitioner-researchers, including Ian Anderson, Sharon Atkinson-Briggs, Kylie Briggs, Paul Briggs, Tui Crumpen, Felicia Dean, Rochelle Patten, Rex Taylor and many others. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2015 Rowley et al.",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1186/s12889-015-2550-3",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "1--9",
journal = "BMC Public Health",
issn = "1471-2458",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "1215",
}