NEWSLETTER October 15, 2015
Shangri-La Marina Cairns Hotel is ready to accommodate national and 
international delegates of the 2015 International Indigenous Health Conference 
in Cairns on the 1st – 3rd December 2015.

" The stage is set for the 2015 International Indigenous Health Conference at 
the Shangri-La Marina Hotel in Cairns, Queensland, Australia scheduled for the 
1st – 3rd December 2015”. 

This year’s conference generates international interests from First Nation’s 
Peoples throughout the world. The conference agenda has now being finalized 
with more than fifty featured keynote speakers. As the conference has been 
centred around the 
sharing of information, increasing network and access to programs, what a great 
opportunity it will be to have more than fifty experts gathered in one roof, 
over the course of this three - day conference, from various states and 
territories of Australia and 
international First Nation’s  speakers freely sharing knowledge, ideas based on 
successes of programs implemented at the community, national and global level 
as well as results of research studies and yarning about personal journeys 
relative to improving 
Indigenous health and wellbeing.

2015 INTERNATIONAL INDIGENOUS HEALTH CONFERENCE AGENDA
 
DAY ONE 
8:00   Registration of Delegates    
9:00 Welcome to Country by Traditional Elder by Aunty Jeanette Singleton 
followed by cultural performances
9:45 Opening Keynote Session:  Australian Health Minister 
10:30 MORNING TEA & Network with Service Providers and Exhibitors
11:00 Keynote: Food & Traditions - Living Healthier Through Omega 3 by Chief 
Roy S Jones Jr, Haida Hereditary Chief of the K’aadaas Gaah K’iiguwaay & 
President Pacific Balance CANADA
11:45 Keynote: Te Whanau O Waipareira–tracking thirty years of Indigenous 
health gains in New Zealand by Dr John Huakau, Epidemiologist and Dr Tanya 
Allport, Research Lead, Te Whanau O Waipareira Trust, NEW ZEALAND 
12:30 LUNCH BREAK & Network with Service Providers/Exhibitors    
1:30 - 2:10 Concurrent Sessions
Room A:  Results from an Indigenous pregnancy cohort: risk factors for chronic 
disease development by Kym Rae and Loretta Weatherall PhD, University of 
Newcastle and Mothers and Babies Research Centre - Gomeroi Gaaynggal Centre, 
NEW SOUTH WALES
Room B:  Hume Region Closing the Health Gap - Client Journey to improve the 
interface between hospital and primary health services by Charmaine Bell, 
Aboriginal Health Transition Officer and Kerrie Brown, Aboriginal Services 
Development Worker, Albury 
Wodonga Health NEW SOUTH WALES
Room C: How is decision making by whanau (family - Maori) when the birth plan 
is caesarean section?     by Dr. Patricia Boyd, Obstetrics & Gynaecology 
Registrar, Work through Global Medics, NEW ZEALAND
2:15 - 3:00 Concurrent Sessions
Room A: How can we gain more from public health interventions and how do we 
start change by Lesleigh Hayes, Researcher, Flinders University WESTERN 
AUSTRALIA
Room B: Sleeping Dogs method for chronically traumatized Indigenous children: a 
trauma and attachment focused treatment intervention in remote Western 
Australia by Arianne Struik, Private Practitioner and Raffaella Salvo, Senior 
Consultant Country, ICTC 
Department of Child Protection and Family Services WA WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Room C: Learning and teaching together - respecting culture and recognising the 
importance of Indigenous consultation by Andrea James, RN Donor Family Support 
& Community Education Nurse, DonateLife NT NORTHERN TERRITORY
3:00 AFTERNOON TEA & Network with Service Providers and Exhibitors 
3:30 Keynote: The Guddi Project: Understanding the level and nature of 
ill-health and neurocognitive disability amongst Indigenous Australians who are 
homeless by Paul White, Director, Specialist Disability Services Assessment & 
Outreach Team, Delina 
Andrews, Project Manager, Ricardo Soares-Maghaleas, Lecturer and Clare 
Townsend, Manager, & A/Professor (Adjunct), Department of Communities, Child 
Services & Disabilities, Synapse, UQ and JCU, QUEENSLAND
4:15 Keynote: Sharing Successes – the Story of the West Australian Indigenous 
Storybook by Sunni Wilson,
Project Officer and Dr Melissa Stoneham, Public Health Advocacy Institute of WA 
(PHAIWA)  WESTERN AUSTRALIA
DAY TWO
DAY 2 (WEDNESDAY) 2ND DECEMBER 
8:00       Registration of Delegates
8:30 Keynote: Kaati te Patu: Māori women stop violence in whānau by Dr. Fiona 
Te Momo, Senior Lecturer, Massey University NEW ZEALAND
9:15 Keynote: Yarn with your mob about organ and tissue donation by Leann 
Bonner & TBC, CALD Project Officer, DonateLife SA SOUTH AUSTRALIA
10:00 MORNING TEA & Network with Service Providers and Exhibitors   
10:30 Concurrent Sessions
Room A: Evaluation of a resilience building approach to promoting mental health 
in Indigenous Job Seekers by Prof. Ian Shochet, Professor of Clinicial 
Psychology QUT, Ms Astrid Wurfl, International Coordinator of the Resourceful 
Adolescent Programs QUT, 
Mr Nick Power, Health Manager, Murdi Paaki Enterprise Corporation QUEENSLAND
Room B: Family matters - A case study on barriers to psychological service 
access for Indigenous Australians with Machado Joseph Disease  by  Libby Massey 
Bodill, Director and & Desireé LaGrappe, Manager MJD Foundation NORTHERN 
TERRITORY
Room C: Baalap Kwobariny (People Getting Better) - Peel Aboriginal Peoples 
Project by Emma James, Counsellor/Educator, Palmerston Association WESTERN 
AUSTRALIA
11:15 Concurrent Sessions
Room A: What Works with an Indigenous Workforce: an Evaluation of the Remote 
Alcohol & Other Drugs Workforce Program by Lauren Buckley, Clinical Supervisor 
Remote Alcohol and Other Drugs Workforce Program NORTHERN TERRITORY
Room B: Respecting the Difference: An Aboriginal Cultural Training Framework 
for NSW Health by Gay Foster, Senior Project Officer NSW Ministry of Health 
Aboriginal Workforce Unit, NEW SOUTH WALES
 Room C: Developing the Womens Health Nurse Practitioner role and working with 
Aboriginal women by Joanne Perks, Women's Health Nurse Practitioner Liverpool 
Women's Health Centre NEW SOUTH WALES
12:00 LUNCH BREAK & Network with Service Providers/Exhibitors    
1:00 Concurrent Sessions
Room A: Opportunities to enhance Indigenous health autonomy: developing 
smartphone delivery of a program for chronic health. Dana Bradford Research 
Scientist CSIRO  
Room B: An exploration of health rights for indigenous patients in renal care 
by Leena Suriyakumar Kesava Panicker
Room C: So first we had coffee and a yarn: Improving health by engaging an 
unengaged mob in an urban environment by Gail Radford,        Aboriginal 
Engagement Officer, Sunbury Community Health
1:45 Concurrent Sessions 
Room A: Vicarious Trauma: Managing the Inevitable by Jacqueline Burke, Clinical 
DirectorRape & Domestic Violence Services Australia 
Room B: Bi-cultural/Bilateral Discussion on Curriculum Design by Denise Riini 
Programme Lead Development and Maori Waiariki Institute of Technology
Room C:  Building Future Indigenous Primary Health Worker Capacity Steven 
Cooper & Judy Hoskins Judy Hoskins, Teacher, Indigenous Health, TAFE North 
Business Manager, Indigenous Health, TAFE North TAFE, North   Indigenous 
Health, QUEENSLAND
2:30 AFTERNOON TEA & Network with Service Providers and Exhibitors 
3:00 Keynote: Deadly Dads - A pilot program to support fathers and improve 
breastfeeding rates in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities by 
Melanie Carter & Robert Monaghan, Senior Manager Training & Education (ABA) 
Robert – Consultant 
Australian Breastfeeding Association & Monaghan Consulting
 3:45 Keynote: Aboriginal women caring for Aboriginal women, yes, it can happen 
in mainstream maternity services by Deanna Stuart-Butler, Manager Womens and 
Children’s Hospital SA

CONFERENCE NETWORKING DINNER SHOW
5:30 Departure from Shangri-La to Cultural Show & Conference Networking Dinner  
 

DAY THREE 
8:00  Registration of Delegates 
8:30 Keynote: Lessons learned from developing an operations research strategy 
for evaluating decentralized health services delivery in remote and rural 
communities: A case study from Dignitas International Sumeet Sodhi Research 
Scientist, Dignitas 
International 
9:15 Keynote: Indigenous Community Health and Wellbeing: The Case of The 
Mapuche in Chile Emma Louise Owen Psychology PhD Candidate Sheffield Hallam 
University
10:00 MORNING TEA & Network with Service Providers and Exhibitors 
10:30 Concurrent Sessions 
Room A:  Improving outcomes in Aboriginal pregnancies by Torna Moya, 
Coordinator of Aboriginal Maternity Care, Armadale Health Service, Perth 
Western Australia 
Room B:  Building the Bridge-Aboriginal Youth and Health Services by Kimi 
Halapio, Policy Analyst, NSW Kids & Families Dept. of Health 
Room C: Transforming Whanau Pathways. A Sexual Violence resource by Sandz Peipi 
Te Pou Kaitakawaenga National Co-ordinator Te Ohaakia a Hine National Network 
Ending Sexual Violence Together - Nga Kaitiaki Mauri 
11:15 Concurrent Sessions 
Room A: A holistic model for Quitline SA and NT: combining motivational 
interviewing and narrative principles by Carolynanha Johnson and Nathan Rigney, 
Aboriginal Quitline Counsellor, Cancer Council SA 
Room B:  Indigenous patient in Intensive Care Unit by Vainess Mbuzi, Clinical 
Nurse The Prince Charles Hospital   
Room C: Lepromatous leprosy: A rare presentation in Australia by Sunny Modi, 
Senior Medical Officer, Greenslopes Private Hospital 
12:00 LUNCH BREAK & Network with Service Providers and Exhibitors  
1:00 Keynote: End of Life Care Palliative Approach, Catherine Jacka, PEPA 
National Coordinator
1:45 PANEL DISCUSSION: Selected Guest Speaker Panellist
2:30 AFTERNOON TEA & End of Conference & Distribution of DVDs and Certificates  
 
PLEASE NOTE:  The above agenda is subject to change without prior notice to 
ensure smooth flow of the conference proceedings.

REGISTRATION: With the quality of both papers and programs put forward and 
included in the conference agenda, numbers are filling fast and vacancies are 
limited. Hence, we encourage anyone who wishes to attend the conference to 
register as soon as 
possible. We have structured our registration in such a way that will save 
organization's money while at the same time providing a great forum for frank 
and open discussion. We’ve also negotiated a special conference rate that can 
only be availed by 
registered delegates booking their hotel rooms direct at the Shangri-La Marina 
Cairns.
For further information, please visit the conference webpage: 
http://www.indigenousconferences.com/#!2015-indigenous-health-conference/c1sdu 
or email us at admin...@iinet.net.au
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and type UNSUBSCRIBE. 
 

                                                                                
                                       
 CALLING FOR PAPERS FOR ALL AGENDA ITEMS

Inspired by the huge success of the international and national Indigenous 
conferences in improving Indigenous People’s health and wellbeing, ICS 
Australia is now calling for papers for the 2016  National CALD Workers 
Conference to be held at the Hervey 
Bay Community Centre on the 26th – 28th September 2016 in the Fraser Coast, 
dubbed the whale capital of Australia. 
CALLING FOR PAPERS FOR ALL AGENDA ITEMS

ICS Australia is looking for cutting edge presentations that empower CALD 
workers, community gatekeepers, ethnic leaders and community service managers 
with tools and knowledge on how to effectively instil change to improve 
services to multicultural 
clients and positively create an impact on today’s global society and provide 
participants with an opportunity to gain greater cultural consciousness. The 
conference agenda will focus on a variety of topics to include:
        Developing a culturally inclusive services & practices
        Health and wellbeing in culturally and linguistically diverse 
communities
        Community Engagement that Works: Approaching Community Gatekeepers
        CAMS Program Stories: Building relationship with CALD Communities
        Migrant Settlement Program Stories: Current Diversity Trends and Issues
        My Aged Care Reform: Impact on Aged CALD Population
        Barriers in Community Services Access from a CALD Client’s perspectives
        Understanding and Healing: Islam and the Australian Experience 
        Respecting One’s Religion: So What’s The Difference? 
        CALD Family Carers: Issues at Hand
        The New Face of Discrimination: Micro-aggressions in Everyday Life 
        Overcoming Adversity in CALD Clients with a Disability
        Exploring the Cultural, Social and Political Influences that Shape 
Identity
        Transforming notions of global diversity through cultural integration
        Cultural Diversity: What You Think You Know and What You Know
        Navigating global trends and the impact on migration of labour and 
skills
        Working with CALD Consumers: Understanding Ethnicity and Race 
        Social Constructions of Inequality: Legal Services for CALD Clients
        Racism STOPS with Me Campaign
        Lessons Learned from Multicultural Workers’ perspectives
        Communication across cultural and ideological barriers
        Interpreting Services for CALD Clients
        CALD Youth Leadership Programs
        Educational Opportunities, Economic Participation and Skilling Programs 
for CALD Jobseekers
        The Philosophy of Diversity: From Theory to Social and Cultural 
Inclusive Practices 
        Family Violence Affecting CALD Families
        Working effectively with CALD employees
        Culturally inclusive local governments
        Cultural and Environmental sustainability 

WORKSHOPS
        Same Race Story Circles: Identify, frame, and shape your personal story 
and cultural narrative, and discover how these influence your career and 
organization.
        Skill Development Workshops: Practice and apply story skills to elevate 
your leadership profile and organizational impact.
        Get Ready to Lead - Leadership StoryTalks: Five Practices of Exemplary 
Leadership that transform values into actions, visions into realities, 
obstacles into innovations, separateness into solidarity, and risks into 
rewards.

GUIDELINES IN SUBMITTING PAPER
        Papers should not contain offensive language and take in to account 
cultural sensitivities.
        Papers may treat the themes in a manner that contributes to a further 
discussion of the conference aims.
        Conference papers must be presented in the finish format not less 60 
days prior to the event.
        First call for papers will close on 30th November 2015 with a second, 
if required.
        Papers that are not chosen in the first round may be resubmitted if 
there is a second round.
        Papers should be submitted in Microsoft Word format.
        Author/s of papers presented at the conference will be formally 
notified acceptance.
        Call for papers registration fee of $650 will apply to all persons 
submitting papers payable upon acceptance of papers.
        Papers should explore ways in which the themes show up in the 
philosophy of the conference.
        A maximum of two presenters for each paper are eligible for the 
discounted call for papers registration fee.
        All papers must be presented in a positive and informative light.

WHY ATTEND
The conference will enable you to discover new strategies for better serving 
your clients and experiencing unparalleled professional and personal growth. 
The event offers more than 30 sessions with engaging and inspiring keynote 
speakers, workshop 
sessions and unparalleled networking opportunities.  
For more information, please visit the conference webpage at this link: 
http://www.indigenousconferences.com/#!2016-cald/c1mhi   or  contact us by 
email at admin...@iinet.net.au

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