Refugee Health Service Receives Award in Australia
New Zealand Refugee Health Service Receives Award in
Australia
A New Zealand refugee mental
health service in Auckland has won a Trans-Tasman award
at the TheMHS 2010 Conference in Sydney for achievement,
innovation and excellence. The nominations came from mental
health services throughout both Australia and New Zealand http://www.themhs.org
The RASNZ
Refugee Mobile Team won the Achievement Award in recognition
of the Refugee
Community Link Worker Project
and Service Outcomes.
The Award was announced
today at the Annual International Conference held
this year in Sydney, Australia. It was presented to
Surpreet Cheema, Clinical Manager of the RASNZ Mobile
Team.
RASNZ is Zealand’s specialist
health agency for all incoming United Nations quota and
convention refugees, and provider of a range of vital mental
health, treatment, rehabilitation, youth, research and
community development services www.rasnz.co.nz
The Auckland Regional Refugee Mobile
Team
What: A multidisciplinary,
specialist mobile mental health team working with
traumatised refugees, taking service directly into their own
communities.
Why: To provide
culturally responsive mental health care within the
community and reduce transport, language and other barriers
to allow access and increase positive outcomes.
How: A specialist mobile team of
psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, body
therapists and refugee community link workers provide mental
health treatment, early clinical intervention, preventive
care and practical grassroots support to refugees at
multiple community venues or in their own homes. Hybrid
eco-vehicles are used to move services into the communities
and homes where refugees live. Also training and
capacity-building for mainstream health and social services.
Target: Traumatised refugees and
survivors of torture in need of rehabilitation and recovery
who are beginning new lives in a new country
Where: Greater metropolitan Auckland
region.
Started: Officially opened by
the Prime Minister in November, 2007
Funded through: Counties Manukau
District Health Board (on behalf of the Auckland Metro
DHB’s), (planned through the NDSA), the ASB Community
Trust, and the United Nations
Outcomes: A two-year
independent evaluation was carried out to examine outcomes
and results which was internationally published. A copy of
the independent evaluation is enclosed.
The MHS Conference is an international
health, psychiatric and educational forum attacting over
1000 clinicians, researchers, cultural and indigenous
workers, educators, consumers and families, and policy
makers. TheMHS organises the largest mental health and
addiction services conference in Australia, New Zealand and
the Pacific. TheMHS aims to promote positive attitudes about
mental health and wellness, and to stimulate debate that
challenges the boundaries of knowledge and ideas about
mental health
care.
ENDS