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Australian Journal of Primary Health Australian Journal of Primary Health Society
The issues influencing community health services and primary health care

Just Accepted

This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Factors informing funding of health services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children: perspectives of decision-makers

Shingisai Chando 0000-0003-4521-3491, Martin Howell, Michelle Dickson, Allison Jaure, Jonathan Craig, Sandra Eades, Kirsten Howard

Abstract

Background: The factors informing decisions to fund health services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are unclear. Objectives: To describe decision-makers’ perspectives on factors informing decisions to fund health services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with thirteen participants experienced in making funding decisions at organisational, state, territory and national levels. Decision-makers were from New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, Victoria, and Western Australia. Transcripts were analysed thematically following the principles of grounded theory. Results: We identified five themes each with subthemes. Prioritising engagement for authentic partnerships (opportunities to build relationships and mutual understanding, co-design and co-evaluation for implementation). Valuing participant experiences to secure receptiveness (cultivating culturally safe environments to facilitate acceptability, empowering for self-determination and sustainability, strengthening connectedness and collaboration for holistic care, restoring confidence and generational trust through long-term commitments). Comprehensive approaches to promote health and wellbeing (linking impacts to developmental milestones, maintaining access to health care, broadening conceptualisations of child health). Threats to optimal service delivery (fractured and outdated technology systems amplify data access difficulties, failure to “truly listen” fuelling redundant policy, rigid funding models undermining innovation). Navigating political and ideological hurdles to advance community priorities (negotiating politicians’ willingness to support community-driven objectives, pressure to satisfy economic and policy considerations, countering entrenched hesitancy to community-controlled governance). Conclusion: Decision-makers viewed participation, engagement, trust, empowerment and community acceptance as important indicators of service performance. This study highlights factors that influence decisions to fund health services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children.

PY24054  Accepted 09 September 2024

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