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Date:      Sun, 21 Oct 2012 17:03:50 +1100
From:      "Indigenous Health Conference" <admin@indigenoushealth.net>
To:        All Health Consultant  <java@freebsd.org>
Subject:   2012 National Indigenous Health Conference: Many Pathways, One Outcome Gold Coast on December 5-7, 2012
Message-ID:  <12163589075921337117@Thomas-HP>

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   MEDIA RELEASE:

   2012 National Indigenous Health Conference: Many Pathways, One Outcome
   at Watermark Hotel & Spa, Gold Coast on December 5-7, 2012


   Seats are now getting very limited for the 2012 National Indigenous
   Health Conference scheduled on the 5th - 7th of December 2012 at the
   Watermark Hotel & Spa in the Gold Coast. The event committee has
   invited several international guest speakers to present Indigenous
   health programs being implemented in Indigenous communities of Canada
   and New Zealand whom will be sharing various pathways, insights,
   results of research studies and different models of practice in the
   field of Indigenous Health.


   Among the prominent international speakers are the representatives of
   The Kotahitanga Whanau Ora Collective - a network of four Maori Health,
   Social Services and Education providers based in South Auckland, New
   Zealand/Aotearoa which provides services to more than 20,000 people and
   has embarked on a challenging journey to design and transform the way
   it delivers services to whanau/families through a new family-centred
   model of care called "Mana Tiaki".  This model is premised on Maori
   values and kaupapa (philosophy and platform) and serves to improve the
   outcomes of families who have significant and multi-faceted needs.  The
   Kotahitanga Collective will be sharing their insights and are keen to
   support the overall intent of the conference in promoting indigenous
   models and approaches to reduce the gap in Indigenous health.


   Te Puea Winiata of Ngati Rangi Ranginui tribe from Tauranga is the CEO
   of Turuki Health Care, a Maori provider of health, social and wellbeing
   services in South Auckland and Chair of the CEO Steering Group of the
   Kotahitanga Whanau Ora Collective. She also currently holds several
   national positions as Chair of Te Rau Matatini Trust, a member of the
   Henry Rongomau Bennett Foundation and a member of the Matua Raki
   Alcohol and Other Drug Workforce Development Advisory Group. Te Puea
   previously worked as the Service Manager, Maori Mental Health Services,
   Auckland District Health Board; a Senior Analyst for the Ministry of
   Health; a Maori Health Advisor, He Kamaka Oranga, Auckland District
   Health Board.  She is also an experienced social worker, social work
   senior practitioner, and a manager and counselor in the alcohol and
   drug field.


   Natasha Kauika-Stevens of Nga Rauru, Ngati Tuwharetoa me Ngati
   Kahungungu is the CEO of Te Kaha O Te Rangatahi Trust, a Maori Youth
   Health and Wellbeing Provider in South Auckland and is also the Change
   Manager for the Kotahitanga Whanau Ora Collective. Natasha has worked
   in the New Zealand health sector for the last 12 years and is
   experienced in Community Development, Maori Health Funding and Planning
   roles. In her current CEO role, Natasha manages an innovative
   youth-focused organisation that specialises in Sexual Health Education
   in Maori and non-Maori Schools (e.g. Secondary, Kura Kaupapa Maori and
   Alternative Education Centres).  Te Kaha also provides a Teenage
   Parenting Service for Youth aged 12- 19 years of age and a Mama & Pepi
   (Mother & Baby) Support Service.



   Sharon Shea of Ngati Ranginui, Ngati Hine, Ngati Haua and Ngati Hako is
   the Principal Consultant for Shea Pita and Associates and is a
   Specialist Advisor to the Kotahitanga Whanau Ora Collective. Sharon
   graduated from both Oxford & Auckland University with an MSc in
   Comparative Social Policy (Distinction) and Bachelor of Laws and Arts
   and began her career in 1993 as a lawyer at Kensington Swan then moved
   into the health sector where she held a range of senior management
   roles in government and non-government organisations focused on Maori
   health improvement.  In 2000, Sharon worked in England with the NHS and
   after she completed her postgraduate studies, returned to New Zealand
   and run a successful consulting business. She is widely recognised as a
   leader in the field of strategy, outcomes framework development,
   project and change management and systems design.  Sharon is
   particularly interested in Maori Development and reducing health,
   social, education and economic inequalities across all populations.
   She holds a variety of Board memberships for both private and
   public/not-for-profit organisations and, as requested, fulfils
   Ministerial appointed roles within New Zealand.

   Furthermore representatives from the northern hemisphere will also be
   sharing different Indigenous health pathways implemented in various
   Indigenous communities in Canada. Dr. Matthew `Matt' Gustafson from the
   University of British Columbia, Canada will be presenting the results
   of their multi-disciplinary research study showing positive correlation
   between oral health and overall physical health; recommending oral
   health providers should consider physical fitness and systemic health
   in order to achieve improvement in oral health in First Nations
   communities. Matt attended the University of Victoria where he majored
   in Chemistry then entered the DDS program at the University of Alberta.
   Following graduation from dental school, he spent a year as a resident
   in the UBC general practice residency program and is currently working
   as the senior resident in this program. In 2011 and 2012, he worked at
   Haida Gwaii aboriginal communities where he conducted research on the
   relationship between overall fitness and oral health. Matt was also
   previously published in Canadians for Health Research about alcoholism.


   Doris Peltier is a publicly disclosed Aboriginal HIV-positive from
   Wikwemikong First Nations on Manitoulin Island. Since being diagnosed
   with AIDS in 2001, she has been involved in HIV/AIDS activism within
   the Aboriginal community at the regional and national level. She has
   served two terms on the Board of Directors for the Canadian Aboriginal
   AIDS Network (CAAN). Her current role as Aboriginal Women and
   Leadership Project Coordinator involves coordinating a consultation
   process with 300+ Aboriginal women in 11 cities across Canada which
   resulted in the development of a national strategy to address
   Aboriginal women's HIV and AIDS issues. She also played a pivotal role
   in the establishment of CAAN VOW (Voices of Women), a standing
   committee of 14 strong Aboriginal women who will monitor the strategic
   action for five years and is currently serving as Vice-Chair of the
   Canadian Treatment Action Council (CTAC) - a national NGO run by and
   for people living with HIV/AIDS, including those who are co-infected
   which promotes informed public policy and builds awareness on issues
   that impede access to treatment and health care for people living with
   HIV/AIDS. Doris also heads CTAC's Aboriginal Working Group (AWG) to
   address treatment and access issues for Aboriginal people living with
   HIV. She will be presenting a keynote session entitled `Creating Safe
   Spaces for Women Living with HIV: Utilizing an Indigenous Sharing
   Circle Model to Engage and Build Capacity for Women' with her
   co-speaker, Carrie Martin.


   Carrie Martin is a Mi'gmaq woman from Listuguj, Canada completed her
   B.A. in Applied Human Sciences at Concordia University and a B.S.W. at
   McGill University. She spent the past 12 years working in the field of
   Aboriginal women's health and is the current Holistic Health
   Coordinator at the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal (NWSM) where she
   facilitates HIV and Hepatitis prevention activities in prisons. Carrie
   is a member of the Montreal Collective for Girls and Women in Conflict
   with the Law and at a national level, she's a member of the Reference
   Group for the International Centre for Infectious Diseases, the
   National Collaborating Centre for Infectious Diseases and participated
   in the Health Council of Canada's project "Understanding and Improving
   First Nations, Inuit and Métis Health in Canada" to discuss cultural
   competency and safety in urban health care. Recently, she became a
   member of the Community Advisory Board of the Canadian HIV Women's
   Sexual and Reproductive Health Cohort Study (CHIWOS). Her work in the
   area of Reproductive Justice has also resulted in her recruitment to La
   Fédération du Québec pour le planning des naissances' Roundtable
   Consultation Group. She also serves as a Research Coordinator in the
   needs assessment in Aboriginal health, the first steps in a long-term
   initiative to establish the first-ever Aboriginal holistic he

   MEDIA RELEASE:

   2012 National Indigenous Health Conference: Many Pathways, One Outcome
   at Watermark Hotel & Spa, Gold Coast on December 5-7, 2012


   Seats are now getting very limited for the 2012 National Indigenous
   Health Conference scheduled on the 5th - 7th of December 2012 at the
   Watermark Hotel & Spa in the Gold Coast. The event committee has
   invited several international guest speakers to present Indigenous
   health programs being implemented in Indigenous communities of Canada
   and New Zealand whom will be sharing various pathways, insights,
   results of research studies and different models of practice in the
   field of Indigenous Health.


   Among the prominent international speakers are the representatives of
   The Kotahitanga Whanau Ora Collective - a network of four Maori Health,
   Social Services and Education providers based in South Auckland, New
   Zealand/Aotearoa which provides services to more than 20,000 people and
   has embarked on a challenging journey to design and transform the way
   it delivers services to whanau/families through a new family-centred
   model of care called "Mana Tiaki".  This model is premised on Maori
   values and kaupapa (philosophy and platform) and serves to improve the
   outcomes of families who have significant and multi-faceted needs.  The
   Kotahitanga Collective will be sharing their insights and are keen to
   support the overall intent of the conference in promoting indigenous
   models and approaches to reduce the gap in Indigenous health.


   Te Puea Winiata of Ngati Rangi Ranginui tribe from Tauranga is the CEO
   of Turuki Health Care, a Maori provider of health, social and wellbeing
   services in South Auckland and Chair of the CEO Steering Group of the
   Kotahitanga Whanau Ora Collective. She also currently holds several
   national positions as Chair of Te Rau Matatini Trust, a member of the
   Henry Rongomau Bennett Foundation and a member of the Matua Raki
   Alcohol and Other Drug Workforce Development Advisory Group. Te Puea
   previously worked as the Service Manager, Maori Mental Health Services,
   Auckland District Health Board; a Senior Analyst for the Ministry of
   Health; a Maori Health Advisor, He Kamaka Oranga, Auckland District
   Health Board.  She is also an experienced social worker, social work
   senior practitioner, and a manager and counselor in the alcohol and
   drug field.


   Natasha Kauika-Stevens of Nga Rauru, Ngati Tuwharetoa me Ngati
   Kahungungu is the CEO of Te Kaha O Te Rangatahi Trust, a Maori Youth
   Health and Wellbeing Provider in South Auckland and is also the Change
   Manager for the Kotahitanga Whanau Ora Collective. Natasha has worked
   in the New Zealand health sector for the last 12 years and is
   experienced in Community Development, Maori Health Funding and Planning
   roles. In her current CEO role, Natasha manages an innovative
   youth-focused organisation that specialises in Sexual Health Education
   in Maori and non-Maori Schools (e.g. Secondary, Kura Kaupapa Maori and
   Alternative Education Centres).  Te Kaha also provides a Teenage
   Parenting Service for Youth aged 12- 19 years of age and a Mama & Pepi
   (Mother & Baby) Support Service.



   Sharon Shea of Ngati Ranginui, Ngati Hine, Ngati Haua and Ngati Hako is
   the Principal Consultant for Shea Pita and Associates and is a
   Specialist Advisor to the Kotahitanga Whanau Ora Collective. Sharon
   graduated from both Oxford & Auckland University with an MSc in
   Comparative Social Policy (Distinction) and Bachelor of Laws and Arts
   and began her career in 1993 as a lawyer at Kensington Swan then moved
   into the health sector where she held a range of senior management
   roles in government and non-government organisations focused on Maori
   health improvement.  In 2000, Sharon worked in England with the NHS and
   after she completed her postgraduate studies, returned to New Zealand
   and run a successful consulting business. She is widely recognised as a
   leader in the field of strategy, outcomes framework development,
   project and change management and systems design.  Sharon is
   particularly interested in Maori Development and reducing health,
   social, education and economic inequalities across all populations.
   She holds a variety of Board memberships for both private and
   public/not-for-profit organisations and, as requested, fulfils
   Ministerial appointed roles within New Zealand.

   Furthermore representatives from the northern hemisphere will also be
   sharing different Indigenous health pathways implemented in various
   Indigenous communities in Canada. Dr. Matthew `Matt' Gustafson from the
   University of British Columbia, Canada will be presenting the results
   of their multi-disciplinary research study showing positive correlation
   between oral health and overall physical health; recommending oral
   health providers should consider physical fitness and systemic health
   in order to achieve improvement in oral health in First Nations
   communities. Matt attended the University of Victoria where he majored
   in Chemistry then entered the DDS program at the University of Alberta.
   Following graduation from dental school, he spent a year as a resident
   in the UBC general practice residency program and is currently working
   as the senior resident in this program. In 2011 and 2012, he worked at
   Haida Gwaii aboriginal communities where he conducted research on the
   relationship between overall fitness and oral health. Matt was also
   previously published in Canadians for Health Research about alcoholism.


   Doris Peltier is a publicly disclosed Aboriginal HIV-positive from
   Wikwemikong First Nations on Manitoulin Island. Since being diagnosed
   with AIDS in 2001, she has been involved in HIV/AIDS activism within
   the Aboriginal community at the regional and national level. She has
   served two terms on the Board of Directors for the Canadian Aboriginal
   AIDS Network (CAAN). Her current role as Aboriginal Women and
   Leadership Project Coordinator involves coordinating a consultation
   process with 300+ Aboriginal women in 11 cities across Canada which
   resulted in the development of a national strategy to address
   Aboriginal women's HIV and AIDS issues. She also played a pivotal role
   in the establishment of CAAN VOW (Voices of Women), a standing
   committee of 14 strong Aboriginal women who will monitor the strategic
   action for five years and is currently serving as Vice-Chair of the
   Canadian Treatment Action Council (CTAC) - a national NGO run by and
   for people living with HIV/AIDS, including those who are co-infected
   which promotes informed public policy and builds awareness on issues
   that impede access to treatment and health care for people living with
   HIV/AIDS. Doris also heads CTAC's Aboriginal Working Group (AWG) to
   address treatment and access issues for Aboriginal people living with
   HIV. She will be presenting a keynote session entitled `Creating Safe
   Spaces for Women Living with HIV: Utilizing an Indigenous Sharing
   Circle Model to Engage and Build Capacity for Women' with her
   co-speaker, Carrie Martin.


   Carrie Martin is a Mi'gmaq woman from Listuguj, Canada completed her
   B.A. in Applied Human Sciences at Concordia University and a B.S.W. at
   McGill University. She spent the past 12 years working in the field of
   Aboriginal women's health and is the current Holistic Health
   Coordinator at the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal (NWSM) where she
   facilitates HIV and Hepatitis prevention activities in prisons. Carrie
   is a member of the Montreal Collective for Girls and Women in Conflict
   with the Law and at a national level, she's a member of the Reference
   Group for the International Centre for Infectious Diseases, the
   National Collaborating Centre for Infectious Diseases and participated
   in the Health Council of Canada's project "Understanding and Improving
   First Nations, Inuit and Métis Health in Canada" to discuss cultural
   competency and safety in urban health care. Recently, she became a
   member of the Community Advisory Board of the Canadian HIV Women's
   Sexual and Reproductive Health Cohort Study (CHIWOS). Her work in the
   area of Reproductive Justice has also resulted in her recruitment to La
   Fédération du Québec pour le planning des naissances' Roundtable
   Consultation Group. She also serves as a Research Coordinator in the
   needs assessment in Aboriginal health, the first steps in a long-term
   initiative to establish the first-ever Aboriginal holistic health
   centre in Montreal. She remains passionate in developing policy and
   practices to improve the overall conditions of Aboriginal health.


   Indeed this 3-day event will offer a truly unique experience for all
   delegates. Attending this event presents an opportunity for workers in
   the field of Indigenous health to form new alliances and opportunities
   at the same time gaining an intricate working knowledge of presented
   successful community programs and efficient strategy implementation.


   To register for the event, please contact us at
   [1]admin@indigenoushealth.net or call 41252347.

   alth centre in Montreal. She remains passionate in developing policy
   and practices to improve the overall conditions of Aboriginal health.


   Indeed this 3-day event will offer a truly unique experience for all
   delegates. Attending this event presents an opportunity for workers in
   the field of Indigenous health to form new alliances and opportunities
   at the same time gaining an intricate working knowledge of presented
   successful community programs and efficient strategy implementation.


   To register for the event, please contact us at
   [2]admin@indigenoushealth.net or call 41252347.

References

   1. mailto:sosmedical@ymail.com
   2. mailto:sosmedical@ymail.com



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