Clair Scrine
University of Western Australia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Clair Scrine.
The International Journal of Qualitative Methods | 2017
Pat Dudgeon; Clair Scrine; A. Cox; Roz Walker
The National Empowerment Project (NEP) is an innovative Aboriginal-led community-based project. Since 2012, it has been working with communities in 11 sites across Australia to develop a culturally appropriate health promotion and primary prevention intervention strategy to reduce the high rates of psychological distress and suicide among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The NEP is built around the use of localized participatory action research (PAR) processes to support communities to identify key factors negatively impacting on their lives as well as strategies for promoting well-being and building resilience. This article details the application of the PAR approach by the NEP Aboriginal community-based researchers. It provides some unique insights into how PAR facilitated communities to have a voice and the ways in which it supported important change processes at both an individual and a community level.
Australian Journal of Primary Health | 2014
A. Cox; Pat Dudgeon; Christopher Holland; Kerrie Kelly; Clair Scrine; Roz Walker
The National Empowerment Project is an innovative Aboriginal-led community empowerment project that has worked with eight Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities across Australia over the period 2012-13. The aim of the Project was to develop, deliver and evaluate a program to: (1) promote positive social and emotional well-being to increase resilience and reduce the high reported rates of psychological distress and suicide among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people; and (2) empower communities to take action to address the social determinants that contribute to psychological distress, suicide and self-harm. Using a participatory action research approach, the communities were supported to identify the risk factors challenging individuals, families and communities, as well as strategies to strengthen protective factors against these challenges. Data gathered during Stage 1 were used to develop a 12-month program to promote social and emotional well-being and build resilience within each community. A common framework, based on the social and emotional well-being concept, was used to support each community to target community-identified protective factors and strategies to strengthen individual, family and community social and emotional well-being. Strengthening the role of culture is critical to this approach and marks an important difference between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and non-Indigenous mental health promotion and prevention activities, including suicide prevention. It has significant implications for policy makers and service providers and is showing positive impact through the translation of research into practice, for example through the development of a locally run empowerment program that aims to address the social determinants of health and their ongoing negative impact on individuals, families and communities. It also provides a framework in which to develop and strengthen culture, connectedness and foster self-determination, through better-informed policy based on community-level holistic responses and solutions as opposed to an exclusive focus on single-issue deficit approaches.
Australian Dental Journal | 2017
Linda Slack-Smith; Lydia Hearn; Clair Scrine; Angela Durey
BACKGROUND People with mental health disorders are reported to have poorer access to dental services and poorer oral health outcomes. The aim of this paper is to analyze current published work regarding barriers and enablers for oral health outcomes and access to dental care for adults with mental health disorders which will be addressed from individual, organizational and systemic perspectives METHODS: A narrative review based on a search of the relevant published work regarding oral health for people with mental health disorders was undertaken using Medline, Web of Science, ERIC and Psychlit. Any relevant systematic reviews were highlighted in this process along with primary studies. RESULTS The published work repeatedly verified poorer oral health and inadequate access to dental services in people with mental health disorders. The published work identified barriers at individual, organizational and systemic levels. Much of the published work focused on barriers with less focus on enablers and interventions. CONCLUSIONS Considerable investigation of barriers had not elucidated options to improve care or outcomes.
Journal of the American Heart Association | 2018
Clancy Read; Alison G Mitchell; Jessica L. de Dassel; Clair Scrine; David Hendrickx; Ross S. Bailie; Vanessa Johnston; Graeme Maguire; Rosalie Schultz; Jonathan R. Carapetis; Anna P. Ralph
Background Rheumatic heart disease is a high‐burden condition in Australian Aboriginal communities. We evaluated a stepped‐wedge, community, randomized trial at 10 Aboriginal communities from 2013 to 2015. A multifaceted intervention was implemented using quality improvement and chronic care model approaches to improve delivery of penicillin prophylaxis for rheumatic heart disease. The trial did not improve penicillin adherence. This mixed‐methods evaluation, designed a priori, aimed to determine the association between methodological approaches and outcomes. Methods and Results An evaluation framework was developed to measure the success of project implementation and of the underlying program theory. The program theory posited that penicillin delivery would be improved through activities implemented at clinics that addressed elements of the chronic care model. Qualitative data were derived from interviews with health‐center staff, informants, and clients; participant observation; and project officer reports. Quantitative data comprised numbers and types of “action items,” which were developed by participating clinic staff with project officers to improve delivery of penicillin injections. Interview data from 121 health‐center staff, 22 informants, and 72 clients revealed barriers to achieving the trials aims, including project‐level factors (short trial duration), implementation factors (types of activities implemented), and contextual factors (high staff turnover and the complex sociocultural environment). Insufficient actions were implemented addressing “self‐management support” and “community linkage” streams of the chronic care model. Increased momentum was evident in later stages of the study. Conclusions The program theory underpinning the study was sound. The limited impact made by the study on adherence was attributable to complex implementation challenges.
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health | 2018
Alice Mitchell; Suzanne Belton; Vanessa Johnston; Clancy Read; Clair Scrine; Anna P. Ralph
Objective: To explore young Aboriginal peoples and clinicians’ experiences of injection pain for the 10 years of penicillin injections children are prescribed to prevent rheumatic fever recurrences.
Working together: Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander mental health and wellbeing principles and practice | 2009
Stephen R. Zubrick; Pat Dudgeon; Graham Gee; Belle Glaskin; Kerrie Kelly; Yin Paradies; Clair Scrine; Roz Walker
Archive | 2012
Pat Dudgeon; Kathleen Cox; D D'Anna; Cheryl Dunkley; K Hams; Kerrie Kelly; Clair Scrine; Rosalyn Walker
Archive | 2014
Stephen R. Zubrick; Carrington Shepherd; Pat Dudgeon; Graham Gee; Yin Paradies; Clair Scrine; Rosalyn Walker
Archive | 2014
Pat Dudgeon; Roz Walker; Clair Scrine; Carrington Shepherd; Tom Calma; Ian Ring
Archive | 2014
Pat Dudgeon; Rosalyn Walker; Clair Scrine; Kathleen Cox; Divina D'Anna; Cheryl Dunkley; Kerrie Kelly; K Hams