Skip to content
Indigenous, Medical Health Aged Care

Members agree to enact a First Nations’ Collective voice to the country’s public health peak body

Public Health Association of Australia 2 mins read

Embargoed until 12:01 am 30 September 2025 AEST

Members of peak body for public health, the Public Health Association of Australia (PHAA), have voted almost unanimously to create an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voice to help guide its work.

After two years of hard work and consultation, the proposal known as the First Nations Collective Co-Design Project was passed at the association’s annual general meeting on Dharawal Country / Wollongong on 16 September. Formalising the work of the Collective required a change to the association’s constitution, and a vote from its members.

The Co-Design Project team was led by the immediate past PHAA Vice President (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Dr Alana Gall a proud Truwulway woman from north-east Coast Lutruwita / Tasmania. It included Elders, and a Co-Design Strategy Group comprising early and mid-career Aboriginal researchers and practitioners in public health. Other members were First Nations mentees, and senior officials from the PHAA Governance structure including its president.

“A huge amount of work by myself and nine other Indigenous people – all volunteers – went into the two-year project to co-design the Indigenous governance model for the PHAA Collective,” Dr Gall, who is based at Southern Cross University, said.

“To see it accepted by most of the PHAA membership gives me hope post the failed Voice referendum, and makes all the hard work worth it.”

The next step of the Collective project will be determined by the Collective members, and facilitated by the incoming PHAA Vice President (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander), Associate Professor and proud Yorta Yorta woman, Summer May Finlay.

“It’s an honour to be leading the implementation of the First Nations Collective which will act as a First Nations Public Health Voice,” Associate Prof Finlay, who is based at the University of Wollongong, said.

“The process will, much like the initial stages, will be co-designed with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander PHAA members, and key leaders. 

“We hope that the development of the Collective will demonstrate the value of a First Nations Voice and encourages other organisations to follow the PHAA’s lead.” 

The association remains steadfast in its support of the Uluru Statement from the Heart movement, which was supported by more than 6 million people, and movement’s goals of a Makarratta, Treaty.

“The country may have chosen in late 2023 to not accept the invitation to create a voice to parliament, but the PHAA has chosen to proceed with an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voice to its operations,” PHAA President, Prof Caroline Miller, said.

“We are grateful to the Collective team to their many years of deliberations, and look forward to incorporating it into our organisation, and being guided by its vital work.”

 

For further information/comment:

Paris Lord (he/him), PHAA Communications & Media Manager, 0478 587 917, [email protected]  

About the Public Health Association of Australia

We’re Australia's peak body for public health and advocate for the health and wellbeing of everyone. We strive to help prevent – rather than cure – illness and disease. We represent around 2,000 individual members from more than 40 professional groups interested in the promotion of public health. We have branches in every state and territory. Learn more at https://www.phaa.net.au/ 


Contact details:

Paris Lord, Public Health Association of Australia, [email protected] or 0478 587 917

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 09/12/2025
  • 05:30
Centre for Eye Research Australia

Australian scientists reveal new genetic risk for severe macular degeneration

Researchers and a person living with macular degeneration are available for interview in East Melbourne today. Australian researchers have for the first time pinpointed specific genetic changes that increase the risk of severe, sight-threatening forms of age-related macular degeneration (AMD). A new study, published today inNature Communications, reveals the specific genetic factors linked to the presence of reticular pseudodrusen - deposits which drive vision loss and are found on the retina of up to 60 per cent of people with advanced AMD. The research, led by the Centre for Eye Research Australia, WEHI and the University of Melbourne, offers a…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 09/12/2025
  • 01:11
SoluPet Inc.

SoluPet Inc. (SoluPet) Announces Strategic Partnership with CHC Healthcare Group (CHC) to Advance Canine Cognitive Health in Asia

Partnership with CHC in Taiwan will pilot SoluPet’s flagship Neuronal Defense™ formulation through CHC’s veterinary and consumer-health ecosystem TORONTO–BUSINESS WIRE– SoluPet,the data and science-driven…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 09/12/2025
  • 00:11
AdvanCell

AdvanCell Receives First Delivery of High-Activity Thorium-228, Highlighting a Unique Industry Capability and Expertise Essential to Scaling Lead-212 Production for Targeted Alpha Therapies

Thorium-228 (228Th) is the parent isotope and key starting material to produce the alpha-emitter Lead-212 (212Pb) The established capability to receive and process high-activity…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.