The latest news from Diversity in Health 2010.
The political panic over sustainability of Australia’s population misses key health issues that any government in the future will have to manage, a new national alliance on multicultural health said today.
An alliance of the nation's leading multicultural services says that recent health announcements by both the ALP and the Liberal Party have simply ignored multicultural Australia.
The biannual Diversity in Health conference will give particular attention to the impact of the Commonwealth Government's health reform program on migrant and refugee communities.
We invite lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and intersex people from ethnic and migrant backgrounds to tell us your health and wellbeing needs.
From the breadth of the program to unmissable networking opportunities to the chance to speak your mind, we give you 10 reasons to go to Diversity in Health 2010.
'It’s the year 2020, and an ultra-conservative government has cancelled all funding for interpreting and translating services within the Australian health system.' This controversial scenario is set to generate debate at the Diversity in Health Conference in June.
Early bird tickets are now on sale for the Diversity in Health 2010 Conference, which includes an impressive line-up of international researchers and Australian health experts.
More than 300 papers have been submitted to the Diversity in Health 2010 Conference, demonstrating a groundswell of interest in the wellbeing of migrants and refugees.
CEH will host a workshop on writing abstracts and creating engaging presentations and posters.
Professor Mark Johnson, co-director of the UK Centre for Evidence in Ethnicity, Health and Diversity, has been confirmed as the first keynote speaker at Diversity in Health 2010.
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