Mobilisation, Politics, Investment and Constant Adaption: Lessons from the Australian Health-Promotion response to HIV
Issue addressed: The Australian response to HIV oversaw one of the most rapid and sustained changes in community behaviourin Australia’s health-promotion history. The combined action of communities of gay men, sex workers, people who inject drugs,people living with HIV and clinicians working in part...
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| Format: | Journal Article |
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Australian Health Promotion Association
2014
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| Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25984 |
| _version_ | 1848751857924571136 |
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| author | Brown, Graham O'Donnell, D. Crooks, L. Crooks, L. Lake, R. |
| author_facet | Brown, Graham O'Donnell, D. Crooks, L. Crooks, L. Lake, R. |
| author_sort | Brown, Graham |
| building | Curtin Institutional Repository |
| collection | Online Access |
| description | Issue addressed: The Australian response to HIV oversaw one of the most rapid and sustained changes in community behaviourin Australia’s health-promotion history. The combined action of communities of gay men, sex workers, people who inject drugs,people living with HIV and clinicians working in partnership with government, public health and research has been recognised formany years as highly successful in minimising the HIV epidemic.Methods: This article will show how the Australian HIV partnership response moved from a crisis response to a constant andcontinuously adapting response, with challenges in sustaining the partnership. Drawing on key themes, lessons for broader healthpromotion are identified.Results: The Australian HIV response has shown that a partnership that is engaged, politically active, adaptive and resourced towork across multiple social, structural, behavioural and health-service levels can reduce the transmission and impact of HIV.Conclusions: The experience of the response to HIV, including its successes and failures, has lessons applicable across healthpromotion. This includes the need to harness community mobilisation and action; sustain participation, investment and leadershipacross the partnership; commit to social, political and structural approaches; and build and use evidence from multiple sources to continuously adapt and evolve.So what? The Australian HIV response was one of the first health issues to have the Ottawa Charter embedded from the beginning,and has many lessons to offer broader health promotion and common challenges. As a profession and a movement, healthpromotion needs to engage with the interactions and synergies across the promotion of health, learn from our evidence, and resist the siloing of our responses. |
| first_indexed | 2025-11-14T07:59:24Z |
| format | Journal Article |
| id | curtin-20.500.11937-25984 |
| institution | Curtin University Malaysia |
| institution_category | Local University |
| last_indexed | 2025-11-14T07:59:24Z |
| publishDate | 2014 |
| publisher | Australian Health Promotion Association |
| recordtype | eprints |
| repository_type | Digital Repository |
| spelling | curtin-20.500.11937-259842017-10-02T02:28:15Z Mobilisation, Politics, Investment and Constant Adaption: Lessons from the Australian Health-Promotion response to HIV Brown, Graham O'Donnell, D. Crooks, L. Crooks, L. Lake, R. Issue addressed: The Australian response to HIV oversaw one of the most rapid and sustained changes in community behaviourin Australia’s health-promotion history. The combined action of communities of gay men, sex workers, people who inject drugs,people living with HIV and clinicians working in partnership with government, public health and research has been recognised formany years as highly successful in minimising the HIV epidemic.Methods: This article will show how the Australian HIV partnership response moved from a crisis response to a constant andcontinuously adapting response, with challenges in sustaining the partnership. Drawing on key themes, lessons for broader healthpromotion are identified.Results: The Australian HIV response has shown that a partnership that is engaged, politically active, adaptive and resourced towork across multiple social, structural, behavioural and health-service levels can reduce the transmission and impact of HIV.Conclusions: The experience of the response to HIV, including its successes and failures, has lessons applicable across healthpromotion. This includes the need to harness community mobilisation and action; sustain participation, investment and leadershipacross the partnership; commit to social, political and structural approaches; and build and use evidence from multiple sources to continuously adapt and evolve.So what? The Australian HIV response was one of the first health issues to have the Ottawa Charter embedded from the beginning,and has many lessons to offer broader health promotion and common challenges. As a profession and a movement, healthpromotion needs to engage with the interactions and synergies across the promotion of health, learn from our evidence, and resist the siloing of our responses. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25984 10.1071/HE13078 Australian Health Promotion Association restricted |
| spellingShingle | Brown, Graham O'Donnell, D. Crooks, L. Crooks, L. Lake, R. Mobilisation, Politics, Investment and Constant Adaption: Lessons from the Australian Health-Promotion response to HIV |
| title | Mobilisation, Politics, Investment and Constant Adaption: Lessons from the Australian Health-Promotion response to HIV |
| title_full | Mobilisation, Politics, Investment and Constant Adaption: Lessons from the Australian Health-Promotion response to HIV |
| title_fullStr | Mobilisation, Politics, Investment and Constant Adaption: Lessons from the Australian Health-Promotion response to HIV |
| title_full_unstemmed | Mobilisation, Politics, Investment and Constant Adaption: Lessons from the Australian Health-Promotion response to HIV |
| title_short | Mobilisation, Politics, Investment and Constant Adaption: Lessons from the Australian Health-Promotion response to HIV |
| title_sort | mobilisation, politics, investment and constant adaption: lessons from the australian health-promotion response to hiv |
| url | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25984 |