Connecting mental health practitioners to improve interdisciplinary mental health care in Australia.
MHPN’s interactive webinars feature case-based discussions and Q&A sessions led by top experts, modeling interdisciplinary practice and collaborative care.
Our podcasts feature local and international mental health experts in conversation on a variety of topics related to mental wellbeing, interdisciplinary practice, and collaborative care.
Connecting mental health practitioners to improve interdisciplinary mental health care in Australia.
Our podcasts feature local and international mental health experts in conversation on a variety of topics related to mental wellbeing, interdisciplinary practice, and collaborative care.
MHPN’s interactive webinars feature case-based discussions and Q&A sessions led by top experts, modeling interdisciplinary practice and collaborative care.
Coming soon.
Join Prof. Pat Dudgeon (a Bardi woman, from the Kimberley in Western Australia), Dr Stewart Sutherland (a Wiradjuri man) and Prof. Alan Rosen in the third episode of this four-part series as they discuss how, by living in harmony with nature, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities are, at the same time, a strength and a priority in our response to the significant impacts of climate change and the Covid 19 pandemic.
Pat Dudgeon is from the Bardi people in Western Australia. She is a psychologist and professor at the Poche Centre for Aboriginal Health and the School of Indigenous Studies at UWA. Her area of research includes Indigenous social and emotional wellbeing and suicide prevention.
She is the director of the Centre of Best Practice in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention at UWA. She is also the lead chief investigator of a national research project, Transforming Indigenous Mental Health and Wellbeing that aims to develop approaches to Indigenous mental health services that promote cultural values and strengths as well as empowering users. She has many publications in Indigenous mental health, in particular, the Working Together Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Mental Health and Wellbeing Principals and Practice 2014.
Alan has 40+ years of experience as a Consultant Psychiatrist of Royal North Shore Hospital and Community Mental Health Services (where he was Service Director and Director of Clinical Services), and at Far West NSW Mental Health Services (current). In March 2013, he was appointed as inaugural Deputy Commissioner of the NSW Mental Health Commission, and in 2014, conferred as an Officer of the Order of Australia.
He has been invited speaker and/or performed consultancies and reviews of service development in most Australian states and territories, UK, Ireland, Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, USA, Canada, China, Hong Kong, Thailand, Argentina, Spain, Portugal, Germany and New Zealand.
He is the author/co author of more than 160 published journal articles, chapters, and books on studies of 24 hour community-based alternatives to acute and long term inpatient care, rehabilitation and recovery, integrated mental health service systems; interdisciplinary mental health teams, including peer workers; assertive care management; early intervention in psychosis; psychiatric stigma; co-occurring disorders, deinstitutionalization, family interventions, cultural influences on mental health service systems, impaired practitioners; rural, remote and global mental health, human rights and mental illness, and mental health impact on and responses by Indigenous communities to “domino” climate change crises, including droughts, bushfires, floods and pandemics.
Stewart Sutherland was born and raised in Wellington NSW the heart of Wiradjuri country. For over 2 decades he has worked in Indigenous health, in more recent years focusing on identity and mental health particularly Social and Emotional Wellbeing. Stewart finished his PHD, at the Australian National University Canberra, the focus of which was the interplay between reconciliation (apology) and the social emotional wellbeing of people forcibly removed from their families. He is the inaugural Associate Dean First Nations, College of Health and Medicine, and the Chair Indigenous Health School of Medicine and Psychology.
Australian Government: Dept Health & Ageing: 2023 . Volume 47
Communicable Diseases Intelligence : COVID-19 Epidemiology and Surveillance Team: COVID-19 Australia: Epidemiology Report 69 Reporting period ending 18 December 2022.
Dudgeon P, Sutherland S & Rosen A, A Conversation About… Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People, Climate Change and Covid 19 –Podcast Series. Parts 1-4, launched 29 Mar 2023, Mental Health Professional Network, Melbourne Australia. https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/UaqyCROND2uGrxzklf96l2D?domain=podcasts.apple.com Spotify.com, Google Podcasts, or ‘MHPN Presents’ in your podcast app.
Patricia Dudgeon, Kate Derry, Kerry Arabena, Tom Brideson, Sheree Cairney, Tom Calma, Tania Dalton, Leilani Darwin, Belinda Duarte, Danielle Dyall, Graham Gee, Paul Gibson, Paul Gray, Allan Groth, Tanja Hirvonen, Chris Holland, Carolyn
Mascall, Robert McPhee, Helen Milroy, Jill Milroy, Janine Mohamed, Justin Mohamed, Donna Murray, Kristen Orazi, Angela Ryder, Gracelyn Smallwood, Stewart Sutherland, Richard Weston, Michael Wright (2020) A National COVID-19 Pandemic Issues Paper on Mental Health and Wellbeing for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples. Transforming Indigenous Mental Health and Wellbeing Grant, The University of Western Australia Poche Centre for Indigenous Health, Australia.
Dudgeon P, Mental Health Impacts of Climate Change and COVID on Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Communities, Poche Center of Indigenous Health School of Indigenous Studies,The University of Western Australia, 2021.
Dudgeon P et al, COVID19 Roadmap to Recovery: A Report for the Nation, Go8: Group of 8
Australia [Universities]. 15 May 2020, https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwi2wZSszvv9AhVTsVYBHeywA8AQFnoECBMQAQ&url=https%3A%2F%2Fgo8.edu.au%2Fresearch%2Froadmap-to-recovery&usg=AOvVaw0iZ7NpQ0E6WT1mtuCRe3e0
Eades S, Eades, F, McCaullay D, et al. (2020) Australia’s First Nations response to Covid 19 pandemic. The Lancet . 2020 25-31 July; 396(10246): 237–238.
Published online 2020 Jul 23. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31545-2
Moodie, N, Ward, J, Dudgeon, P, McDonnell, S, Sutherland S et al. 2020, ‘Roadmap to Recovery: Reporting on a research taskforce supporting Indigenous responses to COVID-19 in Australia’, Australian Journal of Social Issues.
Talley NJ, Stanley FJ, Lucas T, Horton RC, Health & climate change: Australia gets another failing grade in 2020 but shows signs of progress: MJA_Lancet Countdown Report, MJA 214 (2) 75-77, 1 Feb 2021.
This podcast is provided for information purposes only and to provide a broad public understanding of various mental health topics. The podcast may represent the views of the presenters and not necessarily the views of the Mental Health Professionals’ Network (‘MHPN‘). The podcast is not to be relied upon as medical advice, or as a substitute for medical advice, does not establish a provider-patient relationship and should not be a substitute for individual clinical judgement. By accessing MHPN‘s podcasts you also agree to the full terms and conditions of the MHPN Website.
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The Mental Health Professionals’ Network (MHPN) respectfully acknowledges the Wurundjeri and the Boon Wurrung people of the Kulin nation, the Traditional Owners and Custodians of the land on which our office is situated. We also acknowledge Traditional Owners of Country throughout Australia and pay our respects to their Elders past and present.