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First Knowledges Health

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5 stars
9 (30%)
4 stars
17 (56%)
3 stars
3 (10%)
2 stars
1 (3%)
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0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew Bysterveldt.
81 reviews2 followers
December 29, 2024
Having read the rest of the books in this series, I was excited to see what I would learn. I was disappointed that this was less about First Knowledges and more about political treatise on the appalling state of Australia’s health system. The book appears to be written for health practitioners and policy makers, not the general public. Yes, the content is important. But it is not anything actionable by members of the public and didn’t add to my knowledge. Quite contrary to the other books in the series, which I found engaging and worthwhile.
Profile Image for Emmaby Barton Grace.
792 reviews21 followers
December 6, 2024
have unfortunately noticed that i’ve started feeling a little disappointed by the last few of these first knowledges books - i still love them/think they’re essential reading (hence the continued 5 stars even though i would personally rate this a 4), but am finding i’m not getting as much out of them - but maybe that’s a good thing because it means my knowledge is improving? or are the books just not going as deeply as i’d like? i’m not sure

either way, i have a big interest in health, so i was really excited for this - i enjoyed it but wish it had gone a lot deeper. i think partly that was because a lot of what it discussed was similar to what i read about feminist methodologies last week though - interesting to note the crossover but also meant the info wasn’t new to me

some key takeaways/things i found interesting:
- healthy country = healthy people
- life of first peoples pre-colonisation was naturally aligned to being healthy - “health was not something to be sought and attained” (though i think you could save about western life pre-industrialisation also tbf) and ‘intimately connected to Country”
- huge number of factors contribute to health, especially for first peoples, and it isn’t just physical e.g., identity, purpose, belonging, culture, medicine, prevention, holistic, spiritual, mental
- importance of cultural sensitivity/competence/awareness for health professionals e.g., about sorry business, kinship structures. i think this quote, especially when you generalise it to a general respect for culture beyond mourning, sums up the role of health professionals: “it is their right to mourn in a way that is appropriate to their culture, and our responsibility to show compassion and respect rather than bewilderment and misunderstanding” - in line with this, recognising the structural barriers and cultural reasons that mean first peoples may not trust/engage with western health services, and work to address/respect these rather than treating them as uncooperative/ignorant etc
- importance of community self-determination, strengths-based approach (including a focus on empowering first peoples and focusing on prevention and protective factors), and data sovereignty, ensuring research actually benefits and involves first peoples at every stage (including the interpretation and analysis of data!)
- really enjoyed hearing about the different successful services!! especially the birthing wrap-around services and those run by RMH
- capitalism really fucks up our health in every single way!!, first peoples are disproportionately impacted by capitalism and climate change, land sovereignty/titles will help address this

- would have liked more of: exploration of first peoples health and the reasons why health outcomes are poor, structural barriers to accessing healthcare, racism within healthcare system - though not sure if this was intentionally kept minimal because links more to a deficits-based approach/perpetuates negative stereotypes? - as well as just a more fleshed out/in-depth analysis of everything discussed - this just felt to surface level and ultimately i was left wanting a lot more :/
119 reviews
January 22, 2025
Great series to make these topics accessible to mainstream population. Would have like more depth. Loads on WA services where the authors are based and some from VIC. Not a national book or would need many more authors. Loved the design book best from the series
Profile Image for Gabriel Thomas.
88 reviews2 followers
February 12, 2025
Personally, one of the best entries in the First Knowledges series, along with Songlines, County and Astronomy.
These books are so important. I look forward to Ceremony.
Profile Image for Aj.
316 reviews2 followers
April 20, 2025
I was hoping for a little more about indigenous medicine pre-colonisation, but still an illuminating read about the current state of affairs for Aboriginal healthcare.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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