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Presentation Type
Presentation
Location
The University of Notre Dame Australia, Graduation Square
Start Date
8-8-2019 5:30 PM
Description
Dr Raymond Lovett is an NHMRC Early Career Fellow, Research Fellow and Program Leader in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health with the Epidemiology for Policy and Practice group at the National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, with the Australian National University https://rsph.anu.edu.au/people/academics/dr-ray-lovett. He also holds an adjunct Fellowship at the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) in the Indigenous Social and Cultural Wellbeing group, is an Associate Professor at Mayi Kuwayu, The National Study of Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing. https://mkstudy.com.au/our-staff-2/ and works within many projects relating to Indigenous health and wellbeing. His project aims to better understand how cultural factors affect health outcomes in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities through quantifying the relationships between cultural factors such as use of Indigenous Languages, connection to country and strength of identity with health outcomes. Ray is an Aboriginal man from Western NSW, he belongs to the Wongaibon tribe. He is an epidemiologist with extensive experience in health services research, large scale data analysis for public health policy development and evaluation. He is a health policy advisor in the Aboriginal Health Workforce. Starting off his career as an aboriginal health worker and then registered nurse, he has achieved significantly and his contributions have and continue to make a difference.
Recommended Citation
Lovett, Raymond, "The role of reconciliation in wellbeing: what the data story tells us?" (2019). Nulungu Reconciliation Lecture. 1.
https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/nulungu_reconciliationlecture/2019/schedule/1
The role of reconciliation in wellbeing: what the data story tells us?
The University of Notre Dame Australia, Graduation Square
Dr Raymond Lovett is an NHMRC Early Career Fellow, Research Fellow and Program Leader in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health with the Epidemiology for Policy and Practice group at the National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, with the Australian National University https://rsph.anu.edu.au/people/academics/dr-ray-lovett. He also holds an adjunct Fellowship at the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) in the Indigenous Social and Cultural Wellbeing group, is an Associate Professor at Mayi Kuwayu, The National Study of Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing. https://mkstudy.com.au/our-staff-2/ and works within many projects relating to Indigenous health and wellbeing. His project aims to better understand how cultural factors affect health outcomes in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities through quantifying the relationships between cultural factors such as use of Indigenous Languages, connection to country and strength of identity with health outcomes. Ray is an Aboriginal man from Western NSW, he belongs to the Wongaibon tribe. He is an epidemiologist with extensive experience in health services research, large scale data analysis for public health policy development and evaluation. He is a health policy advisor in the Aboriginal Health Workforce. Starting off his career as an aboriginal health worker and then registered nurse, he has achieved significantly and his contributions have and continue to make a difference.