There鈥檚 a word in Noongar language 鈥 debakarn. It means steady, to go steady.
It鈥檚 a principle that has guided the life and work of Yuat Noongar man and 911爆料网 Associate Professor Michael Wright.
Associate Professor Wright was the lead investigator on two National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) funded projects that have reshaped the ways Aboriginal people are supported in mental health services across Western Australia.

Fixing a 鈥榖roken鈥 system
Early in his career as a social worker, Associate Professor Wright came to realise a hard truth: the mental health system was failing Aboriginal families.
鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 getting the help they needed because the system was never designed with them in mind.鈥
鈥淚t is common knowledge that Aboriginal people experience significantly lower health and wellbeing compared to other Australians.鈥
鈥淪adly, they are twice as likely to die from suicide and almost three times more likely to experience high psychological distress.鈥
Aboriginal people face significant barriers in accessing mental health services, due primarily to the lack of culturally responsive services and a deep mistrust of the mental health system.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about simply who gets a place at the table in discussing what healing looks like. And for too long, it hasn鈥檛 been us, our mob, Aboriginal people.鈥
鈥淲e are rarely, involved or ever truly consulted in what mental health care should look like for our people. Therefore, services don鈥檛 consider or even believe, other options need to be considered for our wellbeing, such as family, culture and Country.鈥
鈥淔or us to move forward, we, Aboriginal people and service providers, needed to build relationships and create together another narrative in order to influence and drive the process of change.鈥
鈥Debakarn has become the Looking Forward team鈥檚 mantra because in reality there is no quick fix to transform a system whose worldview has been designed for it only to work for some.鈥
Looking Forward
Associate Professor Wright is the project lead of Looking Forward, Moving Forward 鈥 a NHMRC funded project aimed at changing the way mental health services work with, and for, Aboriginal people.
The project is guided by Elders through the Noongar concept of 鈥Burdiya to Burdiya鈥, or 鈥Boss to Boss鈥.
鈥淓lders are central to our work. They know intimately the needs of community,鈥 Associate Professor Wright said.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e the ones who hold our stories, our history and our cultural knowledge. They know through their own lived experience what healing looks like for Aboriginal people.鈥

鈥淚n the past, services thought they were doing the right thing by just inviting Elders to meetings 鈥 but unfortunately, that is not enough. It鈥檚 not just about them being in the room. It鈥檚 about them leading the work.鈥
鈥淭he Elders are co-researchers in our projects because there simply is no project without them.鈥
鈥淥ur research over the past fourteen years has involved over thirty Elders living in the Perth region in partnership with service providers.鈥
Together, they developed the Debakarn Koorliny Wangkiny (鈥楽teady Walking and Talking鈥) Conditions for Engaging Framework.
鈥淭his framework outlines the conditions necessary to build strong and meaningful relationships between the services and local communities.鈥
鈥淚t is centred on Aboriginal knowledge systems, values and protocols to create a space where Aboriginal people are seen, heard and safe within systems of care,鈥 Associate Professor Wright said.
The framework has since been implemented in mental health and drug and alcohol services across the WA region.
Key findings from the Looking Forward project have also been integrated into the 911爆料网 School of Allied Health curriculum ensuring that future generation of practitioners are equipped to work in culturally responsive ways.
Fourteen years on, Looking Forward continues to make steady gains.
In 2019, Associate Professor Wright and the team were for a new 911爆料网-led project titled 鈥Our Journey, Our Story鈥 which builds on the work of Looking Forward.
The team worked with Elders, young people and non-profit organisation, headspace, to co-design more culturally secure mental health services for Aboriginal youths.
Moving Forward
His research revealed what many Aboriginal people already knew at heart: when Aboriginal people are given space to lead, change can happen.
But that change didn鈥檛 happen overnight. It took the rebuilding of trust through meaningful relationships. It took debakarn.
鈥淲e had to move slow to move right but that鈥檚 how real lasting change happens,鈥 Associate Professor Wright said.
鈥淎nd it doesn鈥檛 just benefit our mob, it鈥檚 good for us all.鈥
And in that steady way, the work continues.
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