No images? Click here APRIL 2024We have recently returned from the Deadly Heart Trek to Mparntwe (Alice Springs) and are so grateful for the invitation to return to this special place to listen, educate, and provide critical early diagnoses and treatment for rheumatic heart disease (RHD) in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. Together with the local health workers and schools, this strengths-based work supplemented current services which are underfunded and under-resourced, improving access to health services and building community resilience and self-determination. Over two weeks, paediatric cardiologists Dr Gavin Wheaton and Dr Bo Remenyi together with our Aboriginal guides led two teams of nine multi-disciplinary doctors, health workers, Congress RHD nurses and team members from The Snow Foundation and Heart Foundation. We were fortunate to visit 13 schools, 7 town camps, 2 youth centres and 6 Congress clinics. In total:
Of the Aboriginal children/youth screened:
Anything over 1% of RHD diagnoses in a community is considered a high burden, though positively the rate is lower than our previous Treks to remote communities. Thank you to partners: Central Australian Aboriginal Congress, NT Rheumatic Heart Disease Control Program, the local paediatric and cardiology staff from Alice Springs Hospital, the schools, town camps, youth centres and communities in Alice Springs, AMSANT, Tangentyere Council, Department of Education NT, NT Health, NT Cardiac, the Deadly Heart Trek delivery teams, Children’s Ground, HeartKids, Telethon Kids, Heart Foundation Australia, Humpty Dumpty Foundation, GE Healthcare, Deadly Science, VioletCo, Take Heart. Thank you also to lead partner The Snow Foundation, a philanthropic organisation providing project management, logistics, community engagement, funding, and communications for the Deadly Heart Trek. Every one of these Treks is a huge learning experience, and we will continue to listen to, and learn from leaders and communities. We will continue talking with politicians and key stakeholders to increase awareness and drive action for more funding and attention to #endRHD. "Their visit was exceptionally well executed and having such a remarkable group of health professionals, who are the best in their field at our college on the day was remarkable. We are so grateful we responded positively to their initial email and took up their offer to have students screened. Thank you DHT." Here's some of the media coverage: National Indigenous Times, National Indigenous Times, NT News, 8CCC, SBS Radio and ABC TV Darwin. We'd love you to follow and share our social media - Facebook and Instagram Thank you from The Deadly Hearts Board: Vicki Wade - Aboriginal cultural advisor, Dr Rob Justo, Dr Bo Remenyi and Dr Gavin Wheaton paediatric cardiologists, Karen Iles – Aboriginal social justice lawyer, Georgina Byron - CEO The Snow Foundation. You have received this email as a stakeholder of the Trek. Photo above: Georgina Byron - The Snow Foundation and Vicki Wade - Aboriginal Cultural Lead - education session on healthy hearts and skin Roy Farmer, Aboriginal Health Practitioner from Tiwi Islands part of the NEARER Scan program (MENZIES) - Roy completed his 100 supervised echocardiogram scans while with the Deadly Heart Trek, Dr Ella Huber doing skin checks The Deadly Heart Trek Central Australia Delivery Team – most team members – Back row: Scarlett Gaffey, Corrine Toune, Dr Hilary Hardefeldt, Dr Bo Remenyi, Melissa Van Leeuwen, Dr Ben Jones, Jess O’Brien, Dr Ben Reeves, Gabrielle Nihill, Kellie Kerin, Dr Gavin Wheaton. Front Row: Dr Ari Horton, Roy Farmer, Karen Iles, Vicki Wade, Sheena Foskett, Georgina Byron Kellie Kerin - Aboriginal Guide and Aboriginal Health Worker Cassie from the Tiwi Islands doing education at a community centre Dr Bo Remenyi using echo scan and Sonographer Sheena spent some time training Aboriginal Health Worker Cassie from the Tiwi Islands on how to do echo scans, as part of the NEARER Scan Project (MENZIES). Naomi from Central Australian Aboriginal Congress. VIcki Wade and Dr Gavin Wheaton at CAAMA Radio. Dr Ella Huber doing skin checks and reading education books about healthy skin - the Gija Healthy Skin Story (developed with Warmum community) and Yara Yurtu Jarrja Ngarrmanu (Good Skin) (developed with Mulan community) donated by Telethon Kids Institute. And Dr Ben Jones doing an echo scan. Indigenous Deadly Heart Trek team members: Roy Farmer, Jess O'Brien, VIcki Wade, Karen Iles, Greg McCabe, Kellie Kerin |