Figures, tables and boxes | p. x |
Contributors | p. xii |
Acknowledgments | p. xvii |
Note on photographs | p. xviii |
Introduction | p. xix |
References | p. xxix |
Defining what we mean | p. 1 |
The biomedical model of health: Its successes and limits | p. 3 |
The origins of contemporary social models of health | p. 3 |
The role of the individual: Lifestyle and risk | p. 7 |
Social determinants | p. 9 |
Causality and the social gradient of health | p. 12 |
Explanations for the social gradient in health | p. 13 |
Social determinants and Indigenous health | p. 16 |
Summary | p. 17 |
Discussion questions | p. 17 |
References | p. 18 |
Understanding the processes | p. 21 |
Theories of society, evidence and epidemiological models | p. 23 |
Models, relationships and social epidemiology | p. 27 |
Social epidemiology and biological models | p. 30 |
Applying social health models to Indigenous health | p. 31 |
Conclusion | p. 34 |
Summary | p. 36 |
Discussion questions | p. 36 |
Acknowledgments | p. 37 |
References | p. 37 |
History | p. 41 |
Illness and invasion, sin and sorcery: The first hundred years | p. 42 |
Protection, exploitation and activism: Indigenous health in the interwar years | p. 49 |
'We demand that this genocide should cease': Health and human rights, 1950-70 | p. 55 |
Conclusion | p. 61 |
Summary | p. 61 |
Discussion questions | p. 62 |
References | p. 62 |
Racism | p. 65 |
Theoretical considerations | p. 67 |
Empirical studies of self-reported racism and health | p. 70 |
Anti-racism and Indigenous Australians | p. 75 |
Summary | p. 79 |
Discussion questions | p. 80 |
Acknowledgments | p. 80 |
References | p. 80 |
Poverty and social class | p. 87 |
Social class | p. 88 |
Social class and health | p. 92 |
Causal pathways | p. 94 |
Indigenous poverty and health | p. 94 |
Conclusion | p. 103 |
Summary | p. 103 |
Discussion questions | p. 104 |
References | p. 104 |
Social capital | p. 109 |
Social capital: What is it? | p. 110 |
Key social capital thinkers | p. 111 |
Bonding, bridging and linking social capital | p. 113 |
Outcomes of social capital | p. 114 |
Anomie: The absence of social capital | p. 115 |
Racism, economic inequity and its impact on social capital | p. 117 |
Measuring social capital | p. 119 |
Does social capital offer any directions for improving Indigenous health status? | p. 121 |
Conclusion | p. 129 |
Summary | p. 129 |
Discussion questions | p. 130 |
References | p. 130 |
Education | p. 135 |
The associations between educational attainment and Indigenous health outcomes in Australia: Background | p. 136 |
Indigenous education and health outcomes in Australia: A statistical overview | p. 139 |
Associations between educational attainment and Indigenous health outcomes: The Australian research | p. 141 |
Conclusion | p. 146 |
Summary | p. 148 |
Discussion questions | p. 148 |
References | p. 149 |
Employment and welfare | p. 153 |
Employment | p. 154 |
Some neo-classical views of employment | p. 154 |
Wider considerations | p. 155 |
The CDEP | p. 157 |
Understanding the Indigenous perspective on workfulness | p. 160 |
Welfare | p. 161 |
Indigenous people and the Australian welfare system | p. 162 |
Indigenous direct welfare and health | p. 164 |
The broader dimensions of Indigenous welfare | p. 165 |
Racialised 'welfare' rhetoric and Indigenous health | p. 168 |
Political dimensions: Indigenous welfare dependency | p. 169 |
Critiquing the political dimension of Indigenous welfare from a health perspective | p. 170 |
Conclusion | p. 171 |
Summary | p. 172 |
Discussion questions | p. 172 |
Acknowledgment | p. 172 |
References | p. 173 |
Country | p. 177 |
Indigenous definitions of place | p. 179 |
Contemporary Indigenous places: An historical perspective | p. 182 |
Country needs its people | p. 186 |
Healthy country, healthy people | p. 188 |
Place and health | p. 190 |
Place and the social determinants of Indigenous health | p. 192 |
Conclusion | p. 194 |
Summary | p. 195 |
Discussion questions | p. 196 |
Authors' note | p. 196 |
References | p. 196 |
Housing | p. 203 |
A brief historical perspective | p. 204 |
Housing conditions and their contribution to the ill-health of Indigenous Australians | p. 207 |
Governance and management of Indigenous housing programs | p. 215 |
Initiatives to improve housing conditions in remote Indigenous communities | p. 217 |
Housing and health research | p. 219 |
A continuous quality improvement, ecological, evidence-based approach | p. 221 |
Summary | p. 224 |
Discussion questions | p. 225 |
Acknowledgment | p. 225 |
References | p. 226 |
Policy processes | p. 231 |
The social dynamics of Indigenous health policy | p. 232 |
A federated health system | p. 236 |
The constitutional context of Indigenous health policy | p. 238 |
Early Commonwealth powers in health | p. 239 |
The evolving role of the Commonwealth in health and Indigenous affairs | p. 240 |
After the 1967 referendum | p. 241 |
Developing a national Indigenous health program | p. 242 |
Indigenous health Framework Agreements | p. 245 |
National Strategic Framework for Indigenous health | p. 246 |
Conclusion | p. 247 |
Summary | p. 248 |
Discussion questions | p. 249 |
Acknowledgments | p. 249 |
References | p. 249 |
Human rights | p. 253 |
The human right to health | p. 254 |
Health and human rights | p. 261 |
Conclusion | p. 264 |
Summary | p. 265 |
Discussion questions | p. 266 |
Acknowledgment | p. 267 |
References | p. 267 |
Interventions and sustainable programs | p. 271 |
The challenges of a community-based intervention: The Looma Healthy Lifestyle project | p. 274 |
A national overview: Injury prevention and safety promotion | p. 279 |
Measuring the impact of interventions: The Council for Aboriginal Alcohol Program Services | p. 283 |
Conclusion | p. 289 |
Summary | p. 290 |
Discussion question | p. 291 |
Acknowledgment | p. 291 |
References | p. 292 |
Index | p. 296 |
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