Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2026 May 1;23(5):600. doi: 10.3390/ijerph23050600.
ABSTRACT
The Australian University Departments of Rural Health (UDRHs) promote the health and wellbeing of people in rural and remote Australia through health education, research, and advocacy. This narrative review evaluated the extent to which Indigenous health intervention research conducted by UDRHs over a 12-year period (2010-2021) aligned with the Principles and Priorities of the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Plan 2021-2031. The purpose was to reflect on past UDRH research contributions to identify existing strengths and areas for improvement in line with current policy. Thirty-three relevant UDRH publications were identified from a broader database of UDRH research outputs. Each paper was independently coded by at least two authors as demonstrating “yes”, “partial”, or “not evident” alignment with the twelve priorities of the Health Plan. UDRH intervention research demonstrated strengths in genuine shared decision making and partnerships with Indigenous communities, workforce development, health promotion, and identifying and addressing racism. However, gaps were evident in research addressing social and emotional wellbeing, mental health and suicide prevention, promotion of healthy environments, sustainability and preparedness, and transparency regarding shared access to data and information. UDRHs play a key role in building research capacity among staff and communities in rural settings and often maintain long-standing, respectful relationships with local Indigenous communities. While UDRH research aligns with many domains of the national Health Plan, future efforts should prioritise social and emotional wellbeing and mental health. Improved reporting of shared data access represents an immediate opportunity for enhancement.
PMID:42196693 | DOI:10.3390/ijerph23050600
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