Creating our Future - Now
Public Health Association Conference
Information
31 August – 2
September
Lincoln University,
Canterbury
Creating our Future - Now
The conference Creating our Future
– Now is about looking at what current public health
practice is doing successfully to create a healthier future
for all New Zealanders – across the socioeconomic
spectrum. It will examine what makes environments and
communities sustainable and resilient, and what it takes to
come back from disaster. It will focus on the health of the
country’s smaller ethnic groups, particularly the Asian
community which is the country’s fastest-growing, but is
often overlooked.
The conference is the biggest event on the 2011 public health calendar and will include papers from people working on issues that are current ‘hot topics’, such as:
• Income inequality in New Zealand –
what it means for the gap in health status between differing
groups of New Zealanders.
• Child home safety
– are we tackling a “wicked problem” with tame
solutions?
• Junk food sugars resistant even to
regular teeth brushing
• The unrecognised
value of the “Oldie Army” after the Canterbury
quakes
• The harm to male-female relationships
contained in beer advertising
• Casinos
offering warm welcome to lonely refugees: the harm gambling
does to the Asian community
• How to reach
teenagers about the dangers of tanning: is technology
showing the effects of premature ageing the answer?
•
Healthline 10 years on: has it met its goals of saving money
and helping those who don't use primary care services –
the elderly, adolescents, Maori, Pasifika and the
poor.
• Growing Up in New Zealand – is
intervention at birth “a bit late”?
•
Diversity versus social justice – how inequities are
created
• Climate change and health – what
public health practitioners can do to help mitigate the
worst effects
• Recovery from disaster – what
can Christchurch learn from international
experience?
Keynote speakers:
In line with its carboNZeroCertTM accreditation the conference has lined up New Zealand-only keynote speakers, some of whom are world leaders in their fields. They are:
• Prof Peter
Crampton is Pro-Vice Chancellor of the Division of
Health Sciences; Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, University
of Otago. He is a specialist in public health medicine with
his research focused on social indicators, social
epidemiology and health care policy.
• Dr Bob
Frame is Principal Scientist (Sustainability and
Society), Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research. He is
particularly interested in helping people imagine what kinds
of futures might lay ahead. The key is then to find ways to
translate those futures into good decision-making processes.
• Dr Ramon Pink (Te Aupouri) is a
Public Health Physician, Community and Public Health,
Medical Officer of Health, Canterbury. He is Medical
Officer of Health for Canterbury, with a special interest in
communicable disease and emergency planning.
• Dr Susan Morton is the Director and
Principal Investigator leading Growing Up in New
Zealand and a Senior Lecturer in Epidemiology and
Population Health, University of Auckland. She holds
postgraduate qualifications in mathematics and statistics
and is an expert in life course epidemiology.
• Dr Rhys Jones (Ngati
Kahungunu) is a Public Health Physician and a Senior
Lecturer, Te Kupenga Hauora Maori, University of Auckland.
His research addresses various aspects of Maori wellbeing,
and he has a particular interest in the links between
climate change and health.
• Prof Philippa
Howden-Chapman is the Director of the NZ Centre for
Sustainable Cities and He Kainga Oranga/ Housing and Health
Research Programme. She teaches in the area of health and
public policy. Her current research interests are reducing
inequalities in health and urban systems, housing, energy,
climate change and health.
• Dr Anna
Stevenson is a Public Health Specialist with the
Christchurch City Council and the Canterbury District Health
Board. She has worked to create partnerships between the
health sector and local/regional government focusing on
health impact assessment and health-promoting public policy,
particularly in transport and urban
design.
• Dr David Johnston is Senior
Scientist at GNS Science and the Director of Massey
University’s Joint Centre for Disaster Research. He
focuses on human responses to disaster and the role of
public education in building community resilience and
recovery.
• Chrissie Williams is a
three-term Christchurch City Councillor, representing the
Burwood Pegasus Ward. With a background in science,
engineering, teaching, outdoor education and sports
administration Chrissie has been involved in many Council
issues, but recently has focussed on social housing, city
planning, water, waste-water and transport.
• Dr Cheryl Brunton is Senior
Lecturer in Public Health at the University of Otago,
Christchurch. She is a Public Health Specialist with
Community and Public Health and Medical Officer of Health,
West Coast. She has particular interests in communicable
disease control and environmental health which span her
professional roles.
• The Aranui Community
Renewal Project was formed in 2002 and offers more
than 40 services through its community centre. Manager
Rachael Fonotia and colleagues will profile the Aranui
community, the issues and challenges faced and the positive
progress that has been achieved against difficult odds
including the recent Canterbury earthquakes.
• Assoc Prof Elsie Ho is the Director
of Population Mental Health, School of Population Health,
University of Auckland. She is a leading expert in
migration and mental health studies in New Zealand, and has
published widely on the topics of Asian transnational
communities, migrant and refugee settlement and diversity
issues.
•
Summary of presentations
Following are summaries of some of the papers being presented at the PHA conference. This list is not exhaustive, but provides a snapshot of the issues that will be covered.
For further information, contact Rob Zorn 04 973 3759, 021 726 273.
Presentations - General
Impacts of income inequality:
the Index of Health and Social Problems in Aotearoa New
Zealand
Paul Barber: New Zealand has
experienced the fastest growth in income inequality of any
of the OECD countries over recent decades. Inequality is
hurting us all through high social problems and lost
opportunity for economic and social development. The
evidence is clear that communities with less inequality work
together better, are healthier, suffer fewer social problems
and are more environmentally sustainable.
“Real
men” drink beer – building the case for restricted
liquor advertising
Christy Parker: The
potential for social harm, particularly the perpetuation of
a climate of family violence, contained in beer advertising.
New research indicates the advertisements, which aim to
appeal to young men about the age they are forming their
identities, operate as a “manual on masculinity” with
excessive beer consumption, larrikin activities, negative
attitudes towards women and avoidance of intimacy all
constructed as markers of being a “real
man”.
Junk food sugar resistant to even good
oral hygiene
Deepa Krishnan: New research
into the effect of junk food sugar has found the damage it
does to teeth is so severe that not even regular and
frequent teeth brushing can completely counter it. The
“mother of all junk food evils” is considered to be
fizzy drink because it combines huge amounts of sugar with
acid – both deadly to the health of teeth. With the
consumption of both junk food and sugar rising, what does
this mean for state-funded treatment of dental
damage?
Child Home Safety – are we tackling a
“wicked problem” with tame
solutions?
Jean Simpson: Preschool
children are more likely to be unintentionally injured at
home than anywhere else. The high rates of death and
hospitalisation are of major concern, given that most
injuries are predictable and preventable. Parents of young
children and community health workers say it is important to
have a safe physical environment but parental fatigue plays
a part and so too does the lack of value placed on
parenting. Such societal influences are not on the
traditional list of hazards for child injury, yet they could
be critical for child safety in contemporary society.
Tanning, sun protection and skin cancer knowledge
among 13-17 year olds
Rebecca Gray: Young
people will be the primary target of a sun safety public
health campaign for the next three years. Evidence gathered
to inform the development of the campaign indicates youth
may respond to an appearance-focused approach that
highlights the skin damage and premature ageing caused by
too much exposure to ultraviolet rays.
The end of
“lifestyle”
David Sinclair:
“Lifestyle” diseases such as diabetes, lung cancer and
cardiovascular disease must result from people’s choices,
so they surely can’t have anyone else to blame can they?
Why should good taxpayers’ money be used to benefit those
who are indolent and poor? Because they are clearly not
“lifestyle diseases”, they are diseases associated with
living conditions: social, economic and environmental
poverty. Deprivation must be the focus, not “lifestyle”.
This insidious term must be abandoned if public health’s
relevance and legitimacy are not to be further
undermined.
Waiting till after birth too late for
improving population health: evidence from Growing up in
New Zealand
Susan Morton: Giving
babies a healthy start in life begins well before they are
born and some of the inequalities seen postnatally have
their origins in pregnancy and even before. Therefore
waiting until after birth to optimise health and wellbeing
for children is already a bit late.
Health
promoting schools – enabling schools and communities to
identify and address health issues in an educational
setting
Tracy Clelland, Penni Cushman:
The concept of ‘Health Promoting Schools’ as schools
that promote the health and wellbeing of their students and
in doing so enhance the learning outcomes of students, has
received global recognition, and is an integral aspect of
school life in a number of countries. Yet the extent to
which the concept is recognised and implemented in New
Zealand has not, to date, been formally
investigated.
Healthline – Access to care for
vulnerable populations
Ian St George:
Healthline has been operating for 10 years in New Zealand.
Its original aims were based on equity (those who perceived
barriers to primary care could be helped) and on economic
considerations (directing people to the right place at the
right time would save money). A number of studies has
demonstrated that Healthline has met its equity aims in that
vulnerable populations (the socioeconomically disadvantaged,
Maori, children, and men, but not Pacific Island people,
adolescents or the elderly) are over-represented among
Healthline users.
Christchurch
Recovery
The value of the “Oldie
Army” in post-quake recovery
Michael
Annear: New research finds that, rather than being a
burden on emergency and other services in the hours and days
following the February earthquake, the over-65s proved to be
a resilient and energetic resource for recovery. Like other
groups they suffered psychological trauma in the quake’s
aftermath, but it didn’t stop them jumping into action
when the shaking stopped.
Earthquake response and
recovery
Daniel Williams, Ramon Pink, Anna
Stevenson, Lucy D’Aeth: Community and Public Health,
the public health division of Canterbury District Health
Board, was responsible for leading the immediate public
health response to the February 22 earthquake. In
the recovery phase the focus has shifted to include the
longer-term challenges of damaged housing, maintaining
drinking water quality, and waste water disposal during the
months or years it will take to rebuild infrastructure and
buildings. Staff have built on existing connections and
relationships with the hardest-hit areas to build community
engagement and resilience and are working at multiple levels
to promote health as a key policy consideration.
Planning for long term recovery after disasters
– what Christchurch can learn from international
experience
Susan Bidwell, Anna Stephenson,
Rebecca Dell: The key challenge for public health is
convincing planners and policy makers to consider health in
all policies. Even though a single agency to lead and take
responsibility for the overall recovery is recommended as
best practice, harnessing the energy and goodwill from
local, community driven initiatives and allowing for active
community participation in the recovery is also critically
important. Public health advocacy has a role to play at the
interface between community groups and official agencies.
Maori
Issues
Drivers of wellbeing in New
Zealand Maori and non-Maori
populations
Martin Wall, Helen Moewaka
Barnes, Ru Quan You: Maximising the level of subjective
wellbeing or self-expressed life satisfaction in the
population is increasingly being seen as both a legitimate
and achievable goal of public policy. To do this requires
understanding what factors are important in determining or
driving wellbeing. An under-researched area is how these
might differ in indigenous populations whose culture and
values are distinct from those of the rest of the
population.
Tamariki Ora – an
approach
John Waldon: The self assessment
of health and wellbeing by Tamariki Maori demonstrates a new
perspective on Whanau Ora. New perspectives are required
otherwise we will “get what we have always got” and we
will fail Tamariki Maori.
Hauora Hakakatanga
Tamawahine Maori – What young Maori women want in a
school-based sexual health service
Anna Poutu
Fay: Youth continue to be disadvantaged in the area of
primary care provision, with serious negative consequences
for their sexual health. Indigenous youth are particularly
vulnerable, as they are disproportionately at risk for poor
sexual health outcomes, and likely to experience significant
barriers to accessing primary health care services. The
status of Maori youth sexual health has increasingly gained
attention over the past decade, in the wake of this
population’s alarming sexual health
statistics.
Reducing cervical screening
inequalities for Maori and Pacific
women
Ruth Davy: Despite considerable
efforts over the past two decades to reduce cervical
screening inequalities for Maori and Pacific women, there
remain significant inequalities in coverage rates and
cervical cancer incidence. An examination of a new training
course to better prepare nurse smear takers to address these
inequalities found, among other things, the need for more
training on approaches that incorporate Maori and Pacific
models of
health.
Diversity
Diversity
versus social justice – it needs to be more than just
embracing difference
Rhys Jones: The
notion of diversity is often used in discussions related to
health inequalities. However health inequities are about
much more than just difference – they are driven by the
unequal distribution of power and various forms of
discrimination. Rather than being about differences in the
characteristics of individuals and populations, inequities
are created and maintained by the way opportunities and
barriers are structured across society.
Ethnic
responsiveness in the health sector – Moving from the
“right thing” to the “bright
thing”
Craig Nicholson: Studies have
found significant health concerns and disparities in the
more than 200 ethnic communities in New Zealand. Yet, many
health organisations are only in the early stages of
learning how to manage and work with such diversity in a
planned and effective manner to contribute to achieving
equitable health outcomes for all
communities.
Creating good practice guidance that
empowers trans people
Jack Byrne: Access
to health services was one of the three key issues addressed
by the Human Rights Commission’s Transgender Inquiry. Its
2008 final report, To be who I am: Kia noho au ki tooku anoo
ao, identified major gaps in the availability,
accessibility, acceptability and quality of medical services
required by trans people wishing to transition to live in
their preferred gender identity. It also found that it was
common for trans people to experience discrimination and
marginalisation when seeking general health
services.
Analysing readiness to adopt an
integrated model by mainstream organisations in response to
diversity and equity
Kawshi De Silva: In
recent years New Zealand has been challenged by the question
of how to deliver effective health services diverse
population groups. Historically, health authorities and
District Health Boards have funded mainstream, Maori and
Pacific health services. New Zealand is now a fast growing,
multicultural society and there is a moral and ethical
responsibility to provide equitable health services to all
population groups. The question is, how can we overcome
organisational, funding and individual constraints to
deliver equity for the diverse population groups?
Asian Issues
Impacts
on gambling and problem gambling on the health and wellbeing
of Asian families
Amritha Sobrun-Maharaj:
New research finds Asian immigrants and refugees are finding
a safe haven at casinos and there, developing gambling
habits that contribute to the “huge harm” being done to
Asian communities. Often finding it hard to integrate
elsewhere, immigrants and refugees are given a warm welcome
and are made to feel important at casinos. Often without
employment, they are often there in a desperate attempt to
improve their finances but end up losing their life savings,
their marriages and families.
Asian youth sexual
health pilot
Ruth Davy, Kawshi De Silva:
Research indicates 56 percent of Asian students aged 16 to
24 years are sexually active. However, Asian culture frowns
upon sex before marriage, and education on issues of
sexuality for young Asian adults is so poor that basic
knowledge of their bodies is seriously lacking. Currently,
issues for the Asian community in New Zealand include high
rates of termination of pregnancy, Chlamydia and human
papilloma virus, particularly for Chinese women.
Sustainability
Hybrid
system in generating a clean energy in domestic
environments
Vish Kallimani, G Anurag, Mahesh
Reddy, K Jyoti: Urbanisation has created serious
problems of solid waste disposal. Increased population
causes increased food consumption which directly leads to
increase in the solid waste. Waste food adds to greenhouse
gas in long term from dump sites. If these resources are
used properly, many useful things can result, such as
energy, compost and monetary benefits.
Sustainable communities, flourishing society –
the real wellbeing benefits of
sustainability
Angela Culpin: Increasing
proportions of the population are being diagnosed with
mental disorders, even where social circumstances are
improving. There are also many more stressors on mental
health including the fear for our future. Society globally
has recently been faced with many threats, including climate
change and the drainage of natural resources.
The Mental
Health Foundation is committed to moving towards a new path
where prosperity takes into account the mental wellbeing of
people, as well as the needs of the planet.
The full programme, as part of the conference handbook, can be viewed at: http://nzphaconference.info/assets/PHA-Conf-2011-handbook-web-part-2.pdf
ENDS