Australian Indigenous Health Gets $4M Investment

Australian Indigenous Health Gets $4M Investment
Aboriginal women gather to meet Indigenous Affairs Minister Mal Brough as he arrives for a meeting with the Mutitjulu community in Mutitjulu, near Alice Springs, Australia, on July 6, 2007. (Ian Waldie/Getty Images)
AAP
By AAP
6/5/2020
Updated:
6/5/2020

The Morrison government is investing $4 million into a range of projects aimed at improving the health of Australia’s indigenous people.

Thirty-nine projects will be funded across Australia, ranging from mental health support, improving nutrition, to increasing health literacy in culturally diverse communities.

“The funding ... will particularly assist Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds and those in the community identified as most at risk of poor health outcomes,” federal Health Minister Greg Hunt said in a statement on Saturday.

The funding will be provided through the National Women’s Health Strategy, National Men’s Strategy and the Child and Youth Health grants.

Other projects include public awareness and health promotion initiatives, programs to support parents and carers of young children, and training for health professionals and educators to enhance their capacity to support children and young people.

Colin Brinsden