The health and wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adolescents and young people: opportunities for applied epidemiology
Abstract
My MAE was undertaken at the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute
(SAHMRI), during 2018-2019. My studies focussed on the health and wellbeing of adolescent
and young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, with the exception of my outbreak
project. My studies included:
Analysis of public health dataset - A retrospective study of South Australian adolescents aged
10-24 years utilising data from the Integrated South Australian Activity Collection dataset.
The aim of the study was to assess leading causes and trends in hospital separations among
adolescents in South Australia (SA) between 2006 and 2015, by sex, age groups and
Aboriginal status. Counts and proportions of leading causes of separation were calculated as
age-standardised rates and negative binominal regression was used to assess trend over
time.
Epidemiological study - Let's Talk About It 2019, an online survey of sexual health,
knowledge, behaviours and access to health services for sexually transmitted infections (STI)
and bloodborne viruses (BBV), amongst young South Australians aged 16-29 years, both
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and non-Indigenous. Descriptive analysis, univariate and
adjusted logistic regression models were used to determine whether socio-demographic
characteristics and sexual risk behaviours were associated with specific behaviours.
Evaluation of a public health surveillance system - The preliminary evaluation of the ATLAS
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Sexual Health Surveillance Network - a national sentinel
surveillance system within Aboriginal community-controlled health services (ACCHS). The
evaluation of ATLAS involved a document review, stakeholder interviews and analysis of
ATLAS data using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (United States of America)
Updated Guidelines for Evaluating Public Health Surveillance Systems. I assessed the
following attributes: acceptability, simplicity, flexibility, data quality, representativeness,
timeliness, stability, and usefulness.
Outbreak investigation - An epidemiological investigation and a retrospective case-control
study of an outbreak of Salmonella Havana in alfalfa sprouts, in Adelaide. The outbreak was
conducted during June and July 2018 with colleagues from SA Health. Investigations
identified the most likely source to be alfalfa sprouts. Public health action lead to a consumer
level recall of all alfalfa sprout products and public health alert.
Teaching - This chapter outlines two teaching sessions, (i) a teaching session to first year
MAE scholars, on a Single Overarching Communication Outcome (SOCO) in relation to the
communication of a public health message; and (ii) a Lessons From the Field to my fellow
scholars, on 'Conducting research with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities'.
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