Strong Born—A First of Its Kind National FASD Prevention Campaign in Australia Led by the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) in Collaboration with the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Strong Born and Public Health Recognition of FASD
1.2. The Aims of the Strong Born Campaign Include
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- Raise awareness of FASD and the harms of drinking alcohol while pregnant among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in rural and remote communities.
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- Utilize strength-based messaging with an overall focus on health and strong babies to drive a whole-of-community approach (promoting everyone having a role in growing a strong next generation).
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- Reduce stigma and shame experienced by women.
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- Deliver messaging that is safe for people with FASD and their families.
1.3. The Development of the Strong Born Campaign Materials
“There are so many people who will help to keep you and bub strong and healthy while pregnant. Grog and pregnancy don’t mix but if you find it hard to stop drinking you can yarn with your clinic mob. Having a bub and dealing with life can be hard. Be kind to yourself and your loved ones. Work together to make small changes first for a healthy bub and family. Clinic mob want to help and yarn through what you need.”[17] (p. 12)
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- Let’s make every baby strong born.
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- Our mob, strong babies, strong futures.
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- No alcohol during pregnancy is best.
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- Safe pregnancies are men’s business too.
1.4. Australian Context of Health Promotions on FASD
1.5. Australian Indigenous Context and FASD
1.6. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Leadership
1.7. Social and Emotional Wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People with Disability and Their Families
1.8. Campaign Implementation: Framing Strong Born from an Indigenous Lens
2. Materials and Methods
Approaches to the Strong Born Campaign
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- Utilizing face-to-face engagements between multi-disciplinary ACCHO staff and community members as a key campaign delivery channel.
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- Increasing the confidence of ACCHO staff to discuss FASD with community members by providing detailed culturally-specific health professionals information so staff could deliver the health messaging in face-to-face engagements.
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- Recognizing the role of partners, friends, family, and other community members in preventing FASD and supporting a healthy pregnancy reflects the preference for whole-of-community approaches that do not stigmatize women.
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- Making Strong Born Campaign materials publicly available and easily accessible. Social media tiles of all the poster portraits and messages were provided online for anyone to access, download, and share or post on social media or online, making materials completely accessible to the community.
3. Results
3.1. Findings: Impact of the Strong Born Campaign
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- Strong Born was launched on 22 February 2023 online via Microsoft Teams by NACCHO CEO Pat Turner and Caterina Giorgi, accompanied by the FASD Working Group members Emily Carter, Sue Thomas, and Dr. Robyn Williams, who gave context to Aboriginal leadership in the prevention of FASD and support of people with FASD and shared perspectives from the ACCO sector.
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- The campaign resources were launched on the same day and received overwhelmingly positive feedback, with a highly engaged audience of 200 people from across Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the USA attending the launch. Strong Born was featured in seven publications (news articles, radio, interviews, and news channels).
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- Launch of the Strong Born Campaign on the NACCHO website, inclusive of a series of fact sheets, online resources, and downloadable copies of all campaign collateral. Campaign materials are all available on the NACCHO website: https://www.naccho.org.au/fasd/strong-born/ (accessed on 20 November 2023).
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- Since its launch, 5047 people have visited the Strong Born website hosting campaign resources, and 92 toolkits have been sent out to communities across the country in rural, remote, and urban communities.
3.2. Anecdotal Feedback on the Strong Born Campaign to NACCHO Received as Follows
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- We have been sharing material on social media since the campaign launch. We’ve been seeing very good engagement; the brand and style are very strong. Congratulations—campaign webinar attendee.
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- A very important resource, LinkedIn comment.
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- Strong Born is a great campaign with some great resources. I look forward to spreading the word, campaign webinar attendee.
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- Thanks for all the amazing work that has gone into producing such great, appropriate and culturally secure material. I look forward to working with it.—ACCHO worker.
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- Strong Born is a great campaign and much needed—campaign webinar attendee.
3.3. Feedback from Strong Born Webinar Launched in Australia on 22 February 2023
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- Loving the final product. Really proud to have been part of the working group. It was such a great group to be part of, and NACCHO led out on this fantastically. Communication and feedback were on point. I am keen to get campaign material out to community.
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- Fantastic launch for a very important issue, congratulations to all involved, really looking forward to using your awesome campaign resources, congratulations to all.
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- The resources look fantastic, great achievement and congratulations to your team.
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- Congratulations to the NACCHO team and the National FASD Working Group. It is wonderful to see the resources in today’s office launch, we can’t wait to share and promote these.
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- Thank you for sharing, I have been working in the awareness and understanding of FASD space in NZ for over 11 years and have had the pleasure of meeting a couple of you over this time. It has been a long journey with good outcomes and attribute this to engaging our te ao Maori Tikanga, traditional practices. Loved hearing the journey of your Kaupapa I feel inspired in what I do.
3.4. Community Engagement with Strong Born through Campaign Toolkits and FASD Grants
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- Campaign materials being translated into local Aboriginal languages.
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- Development of several local community champions campaigns, further enhancing the whole-of-community approach.
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- Awareness and community day activities
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ACCO | Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations |
ACCHOs | Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations |
FASD | Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder |
FARE | Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education |
NACCHO | National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation |
SEWB | Social and emotional wellbeing |
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Williams, R.; Hayton, S.; Campbell, A.; Kemp, H.; Badry, D. Strong Born—A First of Its Kind National FASD Prevention Campaign in Australia Led by the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) in Collaboration with the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs). Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21, 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21010085
Williams R, Hayton S, Campbell A, Kemp H, Badry D. Strong Born—A First of Its Kind National FASD Prevention Campaign in Australia Led by the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) in Collaboration with the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2024; 21(1):85. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21010085
Chicago/Turabian StyleWilliams, Robyn, Sarah Hayton, Annabel Campbell, Holly Kemp, and Dorothy Badry. 2024. "Strong Born—A First of Its Kind National FASD Prevention Campaign in Australia Led by the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) in Collaboration with the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs)" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 21, no. 1: 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21010085
APA StyleWilliams, R., Hayton, S., Campbell, A., Kemp, H., & Badry, D. (2024). Strong Born—A First of Its Kind National FASD Prevention Campaign in Australia Led by the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) in Collaboration with the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 21(1), 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21010085