Establishing health-promoting workplaces in Aboriginal community organisations: healthy eating policies
journal contribution
posted on 2016-01-01, 00:00 authored by C Macdonald, B Genat, S Thorpe, Jennifer BrowneJennifer Browne© La Trobe University 2016. Aboriginal community controlled health organisations (ACCHOs) and cooperatives function at the centre of community life for local Aboriginal people across Victoria. Local Aboriginal people govern them, work within them as managers and service providers, access health and community services from them and form the constituents who determine their directions. Victorian ACCHOs reflect the unique characteristics of the local Aboriginal community. Thus, potentially, Victorian ACCHOs are key strategic sites for health promotion activities that seek to establish and nurture healthy community, family and peer norms. The Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (VACCHO) partnered five metropolitan, regional and rural ACCHOs in a pilot project towards the establishment of healthy food policies and practices in their organisations. Project activities combined both 'top-down' policy-oriented and 'bottom-up' practice-oriented strategies. This paper, drawing upon both baseline and follow-up quantitative and qualitative data, describes initiatives leading to increases in healthy catering choices and related challenges for Aboriginal workplace health promotion practice. Journal compilation.
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Location
Clayton, Vic.Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2016, La Trobe UniversityJournal
Australian journal of primary healthVolume
22Pagination
239-243ISSN
1448-7527eISSN
1836-7399Issue
3Publisher
CSIRO PublishingUsage metrics
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