Education resources in remote Australian Indigenous community dog health programs: a comparison of community and extra-community-produced resources

Sophie Constable, Roselyn Dixon, Robert Dixon

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    3 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Commercial dog health programs in Australian Indigenous communities are a relatively recent occurrence. Health promotion for these programs is an even more recent development, and lacks data on effective practices. This paper analyses 38 resources created by veterinary-community partnerships in Indigenous communities, to 71 resources available through local veterinary service providers. On average, community-produced resources used significantly more of the resource area as image, more imagery as communicative rather than decorative images, larger fonts and smaller segments of text and used images of people with a range of skin tones. As well as informal registers of Standard Australian English, community-produced resources used Aboriginal English and/or Creole languages in their text, while extra-community (EC)-produced resources did not. The text of EC resources had Flesh–Kincaid reading grade levels that excluded a large proportion of community recipients. Also, they did not cover some topics of importance in communities, used academic, formal and technical language, and did not depict people of a representative range of skin tones. As such, community-produced resources were more relevant to the unique situations in remote communities, while EC resources were often inappropriate and in some cases could even distance recipients by using inappropriate language, formats and imagery.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)333-344
    JournalHealth Promotion International
    Volume28
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2013

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