First Nations Perinatal Mental Health Screening

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Welcome to the First Nations Perinatal Mental Health Screening course

This course is about perinatal mental health screening designed specifically for First Nations mothers. During pregnancy and after giving birth, many women experience mental health challenges. First Nations mothers are much more likely to face stressors during this time. 

Existing perinatal mental health screening follows a standard medical approach with a risk-focused model. But for First Nations women, this method isn't effective or culturally safe. Studies show that when screening is done in a way that respects First Nations culture, it supports families more and leads to better outcomes. 

The First Nations Wellbeing Screening Tool Project, part of the Perinatal Mental Health Screening Initiative, found that health professionals lack confidence in culturally appropriate screening. 

This course helps health professionals fill in these gaps. It trains them to use culturally sensitive tools like the Kimberley Mum's Mood Scale, Clinical Yarning, and knowledge of Trauma Informed Care and Motivational Interviewing during perinatal mental health screening. 

Modules 1 and 2 incorporate excellent learning materials that were developed by Kimberley Aboriginal Medical Services (KAMS) and the Western Australian Centre for Rural Health (WACRH) and are hosted on their websites.

The diagram below demonstrates what to expect as you work through the course pathway to access these sites and return with your completion certificates.

Learner pathway
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Module 1 - Kimberley Mum's Mood Scale

This module provides a detailed description of how to perform a routine psychosocial assessment with Aboriginal clients using the Kimberley Mum’s Mood Scale. It also explains pathways for follow-up and referral, and the importance of psychosocial care.

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Module 2 - Clinical Yarning

This module discusses Clinical yarning, which involves applying patient-centered communication skills in specific ways to ensure consultations are culturally secure for First Nations people.