Development of an Australian FASD Indigenous Framework: Aboriginal Healing-Informed and Strengths-Based Ways of Knowing, Being and Doing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Australian FASD Narratives as A Barrier to Accessing Knowledge, Diagnosis and Support
1.2. Aboriginal Healing-Informed and Strengths-Based Pathways
1.3. Australian Guide to the Diagnosis of FASD
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Knowledge Holders
2.2. The Authors
2.3. Methodology
2.3.1. Phase One: Mapping the Selected Data Sources
2.3.2. Phase Two: Extensive Reading and Categorising of the Selected Data
2.3.3. Phase Three: Identifying and Naming Concepts
2.3.4. Phase Four: Integrating the Concepts
2.3.5. Phase Five: Synthesis, Resynthesis and Making It All Make Sense
2.3.6. Phase Six: Validating the Conceptual Framework
3. Results
3.1. Literature Review
3.2. Collaborative Group and Two-Way Individual Yarns
3.3. Conceptual Model
3.4. What Clinicians Need to Know, Be and Do
3.4.1. What Clinicians Need to Know
- Legacies of Colonisation
“The impairments that these kids had were not necessarily solely related to FASD. You know, they have backgrounds of significant trauma and that might also be a significant contributing factor for why they might be impulsive, or why they can’t sit still or focus. You can’t diagnose FASD and wrap it all up in a nice shiny package with a ribbon on top. Untreated trauma is a significant issue that has major implications for a child’s neurodevelopment”.
“If we are to work effectively and appropriately with Māori, we need to understand the full context of Aotearoa’s history. We need to be aware of the systemic and institutional racism around us and within us. And what the impacts of this are for our clients and for our own roles, values, and beliefs as clinicians”.
- Aboriginal perspectives
“On this journey, Aboriginal people need strong allies who become informed, and uphold Aboriginal worldviews and frameworks in the translation into clinical approaches and practice”.
3.4.2. What Clinicians Need to Be
- Unlearning
“Forget the questions because you will never get the answers or an honest account of what’s going on—these kids will tell you what they think you want to hear. Talk to them like you are talking to your own kids”.
“We should assess kids by how well they do the things they are used to. So, thinking about assessing fine motor skills using handwriting, or with a pencil and paper. In some cases, kids that were being assessed came from very, very remote communities, where using a pencil and paper would have been very foreign to them. If their fine motor skills were assessed by, say, tying a fishing line, it could have been a very different outcome”.
“Non-Indigenous clinicians must do much more than simply learn about the Indigenous cultures that they work with. It is essential they look within and identify their own cognitive biases from their life experiences and their clinical frameworks, and work to consistently unlearn and retrain responses stemming from these”.
3.4.3. What Clinicians Need to Do
- The yarn
“So I’ll say “oh I’m from [hometown] and I’ve got a little sister and a big brother, I don’t live with mum and dad anymore because I’m old”. They get to know you and they think “okay she is sharing so that makes me feel more comfortable to share”. They know something about me and the kids begin to find the similarities and points of connection—they can relate to you”.
“How can trust someone I don’t know? If a doctor, clinician—anyone really—doesn’t understand the power of my story and the importance of listening to who I am, how can they possibly offer worthy knowledge to advise to me?”
“I’ve learnt over time, that you have to step back and go, you know what? This kid just wants to tell me about the YouTube video he watched last night and that’s fine. And if that’s what we get through today then hey, he’s leaving happy”.
- Family-directed yarn
- Applying a strengths-based wellbeing approach
- Advocacy
“For Aboriginal peoples, the escalation to child removal and justice is significantly sharper than for non-Aboriginal peoples”.
3.5. What Aboriginal Communities Need to Know, Be and Do
3.5.1. What Aboriginal Communities Need to Know
- Unveiling FASD
“The silent story of FASD within all our families has been there for many years, waiting to be recognised and understood by society. Family narratives of FASD must be told to bring forward hope, reforms and a new era of awareness to replace what is too often described as “despair and hopelessness” by families caring for children adolescents with FASD”.[7] (p. 1).
“The ritual of being intoxicated due to the consumption of alcohol is not the custom of Aboriginal people. It has nothing to do with Aboriginal culture and everything to do with the hopelessness of being immersed in cycles of intergenerational boredom, learned behaviours, power struggles, crisis, vulnerability, abuse, trauma, poverty, grief and loss. We have children that wake up and drink their parents’ alcohol because they are hungry and need something to fill their bellies. Their parents did the same and their parents before that. Here, cycles of loneliness and being alone begin and our children become desperate for connection. This desperation creates gangs of lonely, hungry, isolated, traumatised children with FASD that have been starved of love and all the other basic needs. The only thing these kids are focused on is survival and that leads to a life of crime. That is not a choice, there is no freedom or self-determination in these situations”.
3.5.2. What Aboriginal Communities Need to Be
- Reframing the narrative
“We need to take back our narratives. We lead the way in FASD research and knowledge translation, not because FASD in an “Aboriginal problem” but rather because our cultural ways are powerful, strengths-based and holistic. When the narrative lacks our Aboriginal voice and ownership, deficit discourses that focus on Aboriginal shame and blame emerge and this plays out at a grass roots level for our people. We are sovereign people and these narratives belong to us”.
3.5.3. What Aboriginal Communities Need to Do
- Strengths-based pathways
- Advocacy
“We don’t want our kids knowing the language of the court and these systems. We want our kids knowing their languages, and the language of community and strength”.
4. Discussion
4.1. Yarning in Practice
“They don’t get to be an expert in the classroom and because they don’t have those social skills, they don’t get to be the experts in the playground…so for them to feel like an expert, that’s pretty tight…”
4.2. Yarning to Support Collaboration with Families
4.3. Supporting Aboriginal Communities to Access FASD Knowledges
4.4. Healing-Informed Approach to Gently “Unveil” FASD
“There was a lady who was very silent in the room, I sensed the rawness of her pain, I stopped the FASD training, and I encouraged everyone to get a cuppa. I went over to that lady. She hung her head, and I hung my mine, and we didn’t say much”.
“It’s not about being able to play didgeridoo or paint yourself up, you need to have the cultural and knowledge authority in FASD. You need to know how a community understands knowledge—how someone communicates, interprets, and constructs this thing called “knowledge”. What does that mean to the mob? How do they construct it in their mind and body? This is going to be different for every family because each family and even those that make up that family have their own ways of knowing, being and doing. We must never forget that”.
4.5. Intuitively and Practically Applying Humour
4.6. The Powerful Strength of Sovereign Aboriginal Peoples
“I would be saying jump up and down as loud as you can for the child…stay strong in your instincts, trust yourself, and ask for help, and especially with medical professionals, if at first you don’t have success try a different doctor; don’t stay with a doctor if you are not happy. Find someone who is actually going to help you and your child”.
4.7. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Knowing and Being | Doing | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Belonging and Connection | Holistic Health | Purpose and Control | Dignity and Respect | Basic Needs | ||
Culture | Reciprocal relationships with country, family and community and the importance of culture in developing and maintaining a sense of shared experience and understanding | Multidimensional state of wellness determined and attained via the quality and balance of one’s connections to family, community and culture | Stability at home, employment and financial security, education and cultural and familial responsibilities. Family was key to a sense of stability. | How perceived and treated by others and this is associated with relationships with others, policies, services, and experiences of racism. Family provides a source of shared strength that empowers and motivates. Additionally, having non-Aboriginal systems that value and respect culture being represented positively in media. | Housing, money, access to services, education, employment, opportunities to thrive and need for justice. | Actions and considerations required to deliver a culturally responsive assessment and diagnosis of FASD |
Community | ||||||
Family |
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Share and Cite
Hewlett, N.; Hayes, L.; Williams, R.; Hamilton, S.; Holland, L.; Gall, A.; Doyle, M.; Goldsbury, S.; Boaden, N.; Reid, N. Development of an Australian FASD Indigenous Framework: Aboriginal Healing-Informed and Strengths-Based Ways of Knowing, Being and Doing. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 5215. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20065215
Hewlett N, Hayes L, Williams R, Hamilton S, Holland L, Gall A, Doyle M, Goldsbury S, Boaden N, Reid N. Development of an Australian FASD Indigenous Framework: Aboriginal Healing-Informed and Strengths-Based Ways of Knowing, Being and Doing. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(6):5215. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20065215
Chicago/Turabian StyleHewlett, Nicole, Lorian Hayes, Robyn Williams, Sharynne Hamilton, Lorelle Holland, Alana Gall, Michael Doyle, Sarah Goldsbury, Nirosha Boaden, and Natasha Reid. 2023. "Development of an Australian FASD Indigenous Framework: Aboriginal Healing-Informed and Strengths-Based Ways of Knowing, Being and Doing" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 6: 5215. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20065215
APA StyleHewlett, N., Hayes, L., Williams, R., Hamilton, S., Holland, L., Gall, A., Doyle, M., Goldsbury, S., Boaden, N., & Reid, N. (2023). Development of an Australian FASD Indigenous Framework: Aboriginal Healing-Informed and Strengths-Based Ways of Knowing, Being and Doing. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(6), 5215. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20065215