MJA
MJA

History of the LIME Network and the development of Indigenous health in medical education

Timothy M Haynes, Margo E Collins, Odette Mazel, Louise M A Lawler, Caitlin Ryan and Shaun C Ewen
Med J Aust 2013; 199 (1): 65-68. || doi: 10.5694/mja13.10403
Published online: 8 July 2013

The Leaders in Indigenous Medical Education (LIME) Network has developed over time as an avenue for sharing, developing and improving upon the emerging discipline of Indigenous health in medical education

Background

Historically, the relationship between Indigenous peoples and the medical fraternity has had its challenges. In Australia, doctors were involved in implementing segregation policies and played a role in the removal of Aboriginal children from their families.1 Over time, and in recognition of the role of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in informing government policies and initiatives, researchers and medical practitioners began to acknowledge the special place of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the health system.1-6

The status of Indigenous peoples’ health in Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand remains well below that of their non-Indigenous counterparts.7-9 While there is a range of historical, social and economic factors that influence these figures, the quality of care provided to Indigenous peoples is also an important factor requiring attention.10 The institutions that educate future medical professionals, therefore, have an important responsibility in developing a workforce that is responsive to the needs of Indigenous people.11-13

Joining forces: an informal network for Indigenous health

While formally recognised in 2005, the collaborative effort that underpins the LIME Network has a longer history. In the 1980s, the need for specific training in Indigenous health in medical education was formally submitted for the first time in Australia as part of the Inquiry into Medical Education and Medical Workforce (Ian Anderson, Professor and Foundation Chair of Indigenous Higher Education, University of Melbourne, personal communication).14 Publications on the importance of acknowledging the place of Aboriginal people in the Australian health care system were increasing15,16 and the first Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander medical student recruitment programs were being implemented at sites across Australia (Shannon C, Leon D, Report on the LIME Workshop, 8–10 June 2005, Freemantle).17,18 Recommendations from health conferences increasingly emphasised the need to build an appropriate health workforce and include Indigenous health in education and training.1,19,20

Importantly, in March 1997, the Inaugural Indigenous Graduate and Undergraduate Medical Conference was held at Salamander Bay, New South Wales, followed closely by the Second Indigenous Medical Conference in July that same year (Garvey G, Smith S, Proceedings of the Inaugural Indigenous Graduate and Undergraduate Medical Conference, 31 March – 3 April 1997, Salamander Shores; Garvey G, Smith S, Proceedings of the Second Indigenous Medical Conference, 14–16 July 1997, Salamander Shores).

Convened by the University of Newcastle, and funded by the Australian Government’s Office for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health (OATSIH), these conferences led to the establishment of the Australian Indigenous Doctors’ Association (AIDA), which was formalised in 1998. Further goals and recommendations of these conferences that are pertinent to the LIME Network objectives today included that:

  • the deans of medical schools make a commitment to increasing content on and awareness of Indigenous issues in medical curricula;

  • teaching of Indigenous health be embedded throughout medical curricula;

  • consultation with and participation of Indigenous academics and people in the teaching process is essential; and

  • the number of Indigenous students entering medicine should increase (University of Newcastle, Recommendations to the Medical Deans meeting arising from the Second Indigenous Medical Conference, 29 August 1997, Perth).

These and other recommendations were presented by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander doctors, academics and medical students to a Committee of Deans of Australian Medical Schools (CDAMS, now Medical Deans Australia and New Zealand) meeting in Perth in August 1997, and were subsequently endorsed. The need for significant and effective Indigenous consultation and leadership as a fundamental element of any successful policy or program in Indigenous health was also acknowledged.21

A national curriculum and formalisation of the LIME Network

Following the CDAMS endorsement of the recommendations described above, two national reviews of Indigenous health in medical education were conducted — one by the Australian National Audit Office on behalf of the Department of Health and Aged Care,22 and one by Gail Garvey and Ngiare Brown from the University of Newcastle.21 Both reviews identified a lack of consistency and a scattered approach to the inclusion of Indigenous health in the core medical curriculum and the methods used to recruit Indigenous Australians to study medicine.

As a response to the review findings, in November 1999, representatives from CDAMS and OATSIH and Indigenous medical educators from a number of universities came together to develop a strategy for Indigenous medical education with a twofold focus: workforce (recruitment and retention of Aboriginal people) and curriculum (Ian Anderson, personal communication). A series of meetings was initiated to develop core Indigenous health curricula and a collaborative process for ongoing national oversight to ensure that Indigenous health became a meaningful and sustainable component of medical education.23,24

In 2003, the Indigenous Health Curriculum Project was formalised through a partnership between CDAMS and OATSIH. The Project was hosted by the University of Melbourne’s VicHealth Koori Health Research and Community Development Unit (which was later renamed the Onemda VicHealth Koori Health Unit) under the leadership of Ian Anderson, and Gregory Phillips was employed the National Program Manager. The National Curricula Workshop, held in August 2003 in Victor Harbor, South Australia, brought together leaders engaged in Indigenous health and medical education from around the country to engage in the Project’s objectives:

James Angus OA (Professor and Dean, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, University of Melbourne), who attended the meeting on behalf of CDAMS, reflected:

An audit of all existing Indigenous health curricula in Australian medical schools followed25 and, in the process, the formal cooperation and collaboration between medical schools, CDAMS and the Project team began:

The audit findings led to and informed the development of The CDAMS Indigenous Health Curriculum Framework.26 The Framework was officially launched in August 2004, with the endorsement of CDAMS representing deans from every medical school in Australia:

The Framework provided medical schools with guidelines for developing and delivering Indigenous health content in core medical curricula. Following a determined effort by those involved in the Project, the Framework was included in the Australian Medical Council’s guidelines for medical school accreditation in 2006.27 Gregory Phillips wrote:

The Project also sought to establish a “sustainable, functional and effective network” of Indigenous and non-Indigenous medical educators who could collaborate and support each other in the delivery of Indigenous health curricula.28 To support this objective, a meeting was convened at Clear Mountain, Queensland, toward the end of 2004, which led to the establishment of the LIME Network and plans for the first LIME Connection conference.

The LIME Network program

The first official meeting of the LIME Network was at the inaugural LIME Connection conference in Fremantle, Western Australia, in June 2005, with 74 delegates in attendance. Gregory Phillips presented the LIME Network discussion paper, including the Network’s draft objectives and the LIMElight Awards concept (Shannon C, Leon D, Report on the LIME Workshop, 8–10 June 2005, Freemantle).28 The objectives were endorsed by CDAMS in October that year and, with funding from DoHA, the LIME Network was established as a program in its own right. Gregory Phillips wrote:

The Network has operated as a bi-national program since 2008, and the quality of its processes and program outputs has been acknowledged by several higher education awards (Melbourne School of Population Health Knowledge Exchange Award, University of Melbourne, 2010).29,30

The overarching objectives of the Network are:

  • internal quality review;

  • professional development, capacity building and support;

  • promoting best practice and building an evidence base through research and evaluation;

  • professionalising the discipline;

  • multidisciplinary and multisectoral networking;

  • advocacy and reform; and

  • hosting the LIME Connection conferences.

At the heart of the Network is the LIME Reference Group of medical educators, comprising Indigenous and non-Indigenous representatives from every medical school in Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand. The LIME Steering Committee — made up of medical school deans and representatives from AIDA, Te ORA (Maori Medical Practitioners Association), the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation, Indigenous Allied Health Australia, the Committee of Presidents of Medical Colleges and DoHA — ensures input, communication and partnerships with key representative bodies.

The LIME Network has been pivotal, over a sustained period, in strengthening the connections within and between universities and individuals dedicated to ensuring the quality and effectiveness of teaching and learning of Indigenous health in medical education and best practice in the recruitment and retention of Indigenous medical students:

The materials and resources developed as part of the Network’s program of work contribute to the quality and rigour of Indigenous health teaching and learning and provide a forum for peer mentoring and participant support.

The LIME Connection conferences have become a flagship of the Network’s activities and have been held biennially since 2005. Attracting educators, students and professionals, primarily from the field of medicine, they provide opportunities to share innovations, make connections and gather evidence on best-practice approaches from around the world. Importantly, outstanding work by medical educators is celebrated through the LIMElight Awards.

Conclusion

The LIME Network has developed over time to be a significant avenue through which information about Indigenous health and medical education can be shared, developed and improved upon.

The CDAMS Indigenous Health Curriculum Framework is being widely utilised (not only in medicine, but in other health disciplines) and the quality review tools and evidence-based materials developed as part of the LIME Network program31,32 are ensuring that Indigenous health is developing as a discipline in its own right.

The leadership and support of Medical Deans Australia and New Zealand, AIDA and Te ORA, and the commitment and collegiality of medical educators involved, has been integral to the ongoing development of the LIME Network. We now see record numbers of Indigenous students enrolled in medicine33 and increased consistency and quality of Indigenous health teaching and learning in medicine.34

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