Posts tagged: digital technology

Social Media, Digital Video and Health Promotion

My new refereed journal article has been published online by Health Promotion International. It identifies opportunities and challenges when using social media and digital video for health promotion with communities from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds in Australia, including migrants and refugees.

The piece focuses on:

  • the concept of ‘participation’
  • the relationship between ‘old school’ forms of community driven digital video production and the online, re-mixed world of YouTube
  • the ways in which language, literacy, educational level, age, gender and other factors shape experiences with the internet
  • how social media risk becoming exclusive forms of heath and wellbeing communication.

From this perspective, it provides evidence-based recommendations for practice and future research.

What I like most about this article is the sense of history it creates. It proposes integrating ‘online’ modes of communication with previous ‘offline’ techniques for encouraging participation.

The abstract is available or if you’d like to know more feel free to contact me. Other relevant work:

Digital Technology, Diabetes and Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Communities: A Case Study with Elderly Women from the Vietnamese Community

Sending the Right Message

Engaging Africa/Engaging Africans: Knowledge, Representation, Politics

Last week I presented a paper at Engaging Africa/Engaging Africans: Knowledge, Representation, Politics. It was a fantastic conference and inspirational on many levels. I was particularly interested in the ‘history of knowledge’ relating to African diaspora communities, and its implications for the use and application of digital technology.

My presentation explored issues and opportunities related to mobile phone communication for health and wellbeing information with the Sudanese community. A key element of this was the consideration of a local/community perspective and technology strategies using a ‘differentiated’ approach based on age, gender, language, literacy and other factors. The feedback on my paper was quite positive. It has given me new angles and ideas to explore for an academic article based on the presentation, and a nonfiction piece.

Beyond my own work, I think it was an important academic event for Victoria University to host and support in collaboration with the African Studies Association of Australasia and the Pacific. It demonstrated the complex experiences of African communities, the ongoing negotiation of power relationships between individuals, groups and organisations within and working with African communities, and what we can learn from research, training and development projects happening in the many countries within Africa, and across the world.

Related links:

African Studies Association of Australasia and the Pacific

Sending the Right Message: Use and Access of ICT for Communicating Messages of Health and Community Wellbeing to Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CALD) Communities

Using ICT for Chronic Disease Self-Management by CALD Communities

Outside the Net

Australian Catholics Magazine invited me to contribute a personal story to their current issue which focuses on technology and social justice. This was a chance to reflect on my experiences working with the Sudanese, Vietnamese and Samoan communities in Melbourne’s west, and some of the discoveries I made about the way they interact with digital technology. I enjoy writing short, sharp pieces. It’s only five hundred words, but canvases some of the issues I address through my Post Doctoral research at Victoria University.

High-tech Health in the Bush

My new story has been published as a weekly feature at Eureka Street. High-tech Health in the Bush makes a case for affordable and user friendly technological innovation to effectively support the health and wellbeing of Australia’s diverse range of communities, such as culturally and linguistically diverse groups in rural and remote areas.

High-tech Health in the Bush

High-tech Health in the Bush

The story was a great way to draw on my travel experiences and research work  in regional Australia, and also poorer communities in South Africa.

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