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Tackling Stigma Conference

Overcoming stigma as a barrier to healthcare.

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Overview

Tackling Stigma Conference will focus on cross cutting approaches to understanding and addressing stigma, promote conversations and debate regarding systemic and structural issues that contribute to experiences of stigma in health care settings, and discuss novel strategies to overcome stigma as a barrier to health care. Along with international and domestic keynote speakers, concurrent presentation sessions, a speed networking event, and an evening function, the conference will have a panel discussion that will include people with lived / living experience and cover a range of issues which address intersectional stigma and how that impacts health care access and uptake.

Registration is now closed.Ìý

Before attending, we encourage you to review the documents below (links will open in a new tab):

Ìý
As attendees and presenters,
the Tackling Stigma Conference welcomes:Ìý
  • Health clinicians and practitioners, including peer workers
  • Researchers and academicsÌý
  • People with lived/living experiences of a variety of identities, practices, and health conditions that may be stigmatisedÌý
  • Policymakers and advocates
  • Community organisations and representativesÌý
  • Others interested in overcoming stigma as a barrier to healthcare
What

A new conference focused on stigma research & interventions

Where

UNSW Sydney

When

21-22 November 2024

Featured Speakers

Caty Simon

Narrative Development Director at NC Survivors Union

Caty Simon is Narrative Development Director at NC Survivors Union, leading Narcofeminism Storyshare, a project reducing stigma against people who use drugs through collaborative autobiographical story development. She is an award-winning research consultant who works for national and local organizations by and for people who use drugs and trade sex.

Sara Knotts

Director of Operations, NC Survivors Union

Sara Knotts is a leader with more than a decade of expertise in the finance and operational management of direct-service harm reduction organizations. They currently serve as the Director of Operations at NC Survivors Union and engage in similar work with other harm reduction organizations across the United States. Sara holds a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from East Carolina University and completed the prestigious Healthcare Executive Program at UCLA. Their journey through education and professional responsibilities was compounded by the intersection of internalized and externally reinforced stigmas surrounding their queerness, trans/nonbinary identity, and late-diagnosed neurodiversity, all against a backdrop of early poverty, substance use, and lack of access to medical and mental health support. Sara centers their work on transforming this lived experience into a systemic approach to accessibility, helping organizations build and sustain operational and financial structures rooted in a strengths-based, person-centered ethos.

Carla Treloar

Scientia Professor

Carla Treloar is Scientia Professor at the Centre for Social Research in Health and the Social Policy Research Centre at UNSW, Sydney. Her work brings to light the gaps, failures and harms of health and social systems and poses solutions to better meet the needs of people who experience social marginalisation.

Michelle Blanchard

Honorary Senior /ÌýCo-Chair of the Global Anti-Stigma Alliance

Dr Michelle Blanchard is the Chief Executive Officer of VANISH, an organisation that supports adults affected by adoption, family separation, out of home care and donor conception. Michelle is also an Honorary Senior Fellow in the Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne.

Prior to joining VANISH, Michelle spent two decades in theÌýmental health sector leading key strategic research initiatives, driving service delivery efforts and advocating for policy change and reform, particularly around reducing structural stigma and discrimination and promoting more compassionate cultures of care.ÌýMichelle was Deputy CEO at SANE and Founding Director of the Anne Deveson Research Centre.

Michelle has also held senior roles at the National Mental Health Commission, Butterfly Foundation and the Young and Well Cooperative Research Centre.

In addition to academic qualifications in psychology, political science, adolescent health and welfare and leadership and management, Michelle has a PhD in Youth Mental Health.

Craig Cooper MPA

Craig Cooper MPA: he is passionate about improving health outcomes for vulnerable peoples and populations. Examples of communities and populations include people living with BBVs, LGBTQIA+ communities, Aboriginal people, people from Culturally and Linguistically Diverse backgrounds, and people engaged in the criminal justice system. He possesses more than 20 years health consumer representation and patient advocacy experience and specialises in health system transformation.


Panel Speakers

Mish Pony

CEO of Scarlet Alliance, Australian Sex Workers Association

Mish Pony (they/them) is the CEO of Scarlet Alliance, Australian Sex Workers Association. Mish has over 15 years’ experience advocating for trans, queer and sex worker communities; including international work in the Asia Pacific Region.

Melinda Walker ‘Niirrany’

Senior Project Coordinator at the Kirby Institute

Melinda Walker, a Gumbaynggirr woman, is a social worker, currently serving as a Senior Project Coordinator at the Kirby Institute. Throughout her career, Melinda has demonstrated a commitment to social justice and health equity. With a Bachelor of Social Work (Honours) degree, Melinda has built a career dedicated to advancing public health initiatives and social welfare programs. Melinda's professional interests includes end-of-life care and bereavement. Prior to her current role, she served as a Senior Social Worker in palliative care in the East Kimberley region, Western Australia and Senior Palliative Care Aboriginal Worker with NSW Health. Melinda played a key role in establishing the University of New South Wales Community Reference Panel at the Centre for Social Research in Health and as Assistant Researcher on the Deadly Liver Mob project initiative aimed at improving liver health among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

Thomas Tu

Associate Professor at Westmead Institute for Medical Research

Associate Professor Thomas Tu leads a research group at the Westmead Institute for Medical Research focusing on developing an HBV cure and mitigating the associated liver cancer. He also lives with chronic Hepatitis B, providing him with unique perspectives as a researcher, patient, and advocate.Ìý He established the online support forum HepBCommunity.org and founded Hepatitis B Voices Australia, an advocacy group led by the affected community. Ìý

Andrew Heslop

Senior Health Promotion and Peer Navigation Manager at Positive Life NSW

Andrew Heslop is the Senior Health Promotion and Peer Navigation Manager at Positive Life NSW. Andrew has over ten years’ community-facing experience in operations, training, community engagement, alcohol and other drugs policy/research, gay men’s health and blood borne viruses. He worked previously as Blood Borne Virus Peer Outreach Lead at the NSW Users and AIDS Association (NUAA). He has expertise in organisational governance as Chairperson of NUAA. Andrew was diagnosed with HIV in 2012, and champions compassionate strengths-based, person-centred practice, social justice, inclusivity, and the continuous improvement in quality of life for all people living with HIV and people who use drugs.

Lien Tran

Director at Hep B Voices Australia

Lien is a co-founder and the director of Hepatitis B Voices Australia, the first hepatitis B community organisation that is wholly led by people living with hepatitis BÌýin Australia.ÌýShe is an active advocate for people and communities affected by hepatitis at national and international level.ÌýHer advocacy is grounded on personal and professional experience with constant partnership with affected community, health professionals, researchers, and policy makers. Lien co-founded and moderates an online support group for Vietnamese living with hepatitis in AustraliaÌýwith more than 1000 members. She isÌýalsoÌýa researcher at the WHO Collaborating centre for Viral Hepatitis, Doherty institute with focus on hepatitis B care in primary care.

John Gobeil

Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League (AIVL)

For over 15 years, John has worked in peer-identified roles (PWUD, CALD, and LGBTQ+), notably NUAA and ACON in Australia, and led community health promotion services and harm reduction organisations internationally. They are now Chief Executive Officer of AIVL, the Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League, actively working with the community to advance the wellbeing, health and human rights of people who use drugs and actively reduce stigma and discrimination nationally with the support of the Australian Department of Health.Ìý

Loc Nguyen

Loc Nguyen (they/them) specialises in the public health sector with a focus on LGBTQ+ health, HIV, and sexual health, particularly for multicultural communities and those living in Greater Western Sydney. They are passionate about addressing stigma and discrimination, including structural racism, queerphobia, and transphobia, in health policies, programs, and services.

Candice Gilford

Candice has first-hand experiences of drug and alcohol use, of intimate partner violence, of being unhoused, of enduring custodial, recovery and multiple treatment setting modalities, and utilises the knowledge and insight gained from her life on a daily basis. She works in front-facing, training, research, supervisory, resource development, production and leadership roles and has done so at peer-based government and non-government organisations. She is proudly a person who injects drugs and has been navigating the medication-assisted/opioid treatment system for nearly two decades. Candice currently works at Sydney’s Medically Supervised Injecting Centre (MSIC), and is involved with their consumer group, producing their peer newsletter and coordinating their annual art project. She has undertaken outreach with Kirketon Road Centre (KRC) and also works as a lived experience consultant to South West Sydney Local Health District (SWSLHD) drug health services.


About

The Centre for Social Research in Health was established in 1990. Our work makes a crucial contribution to the Australian response to blood-borne viruses and sexually transmissible infections by examining the social aspects of HIV, viral hepatitis, injecting drug use, sexual health. sexuality and education, substance use and mental health, and the health of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians. We work closely with national and international researchers, community organisations and community advocates, and with government and state bodies (including health departments). Our work is underpinned by a core principle of engaging people with lived and living experience of the wide range of attributes, identities, conditions, and practices that we study.

We are launching the Tackling Stigma Conference in 2024, which will focus on cross cutting approaches to understanding and addressing stigma, promote conversations and debate regarding systemic and structural issues that contribute to experiences of stigma in health care settings, and discuss novel strategies to overcome stigma as a barrier to health care. This conference is guided by an organising committee based at the Centre for Social Research in Health. In keeping with our commitment to centring communities affected by stigma and discrimination, we are also guided by an advisory committee comprised of people with lived and living experience of stigma and discrimination related to a wide range of attributes, identities, conditions, and practices.

Stigma may be understood in many ways. We have provided one definition of stigma below for your reference.

Stigma is a social process whereby people are excluded or treated differently based on attributes, conditions, identities, and practices that are judged or viewed negatively by members of society. Stigma involves the exercise of power and control to devalue certain groups of people. Many people can experience intersecting forms of stigma, with other forms of stigma related to social identities like race, gender, sexuality, and class. Stigma can occur at multiple levels: structural (e.g., in laws, public opinion, media), organisational (e.g., through policies and practices), individual (e.g., through behaviour and language), and intrapersonal (e.g., in beliefs of self-worth). Discrimination refers to how stigma is manifested, such as through negative actions, behaviours, or speech towards people based on those attributes, conditions, identities, and practices. Stigma and discrimination have significant negative health and social impacts on affected people and communities and on costs to the health system.


Conference Topics and Themes

  • Barriers to health care, including experiences of self-stigma and stigma in other settings
  • Lived / living experience of health care, including experiences of stigma, experiences of high-quality health care, reflections on what health care should look like
  • How stigma towards specific behaviours and conditions intersects with other forms of discrimination, such as racism, homophobia, transphobia, sexism, and others
  • Research on how stigma manifests in a variety of health care settings and towards a variety of features of identity, behaviours and conditions, including blood-borne viruses, sexually transmissible infections, mental health, alcohol and other drugs, gender and sexuality diversity, among others
  • Stigma and discrimination in health care policy and practice
  • Identifying and responding to the role that power relations play in producing and perpetuating stigma
  • Silence, obvious blind spots, and major gaps in stigma reduction policies and practices, including unconscious bias
  • Innovative strategies, programs, or interventions to reduce stigma, promote inclusion in health care settings, and/or overcome other barriers to health care particularly peer-led models of care
  • Other strategies, programs, or interventions to promote high-quality care, inclusive care, cultural safety, gender-affirming care, trauma-informed care, and stigma-sensitive practice

We have provided the above topics as a guide only. We will welcome abstracts that more broadly fit within our conference theme of tackling stigma within health care and improving quality of health care provided to priority populations affected by blood-borne viruses and sexually transmissible infections, including people who inject drugs, people who use alcohol and other drugs, men who have sex with men, sex workers, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, culturally and linguistically diverse communities, people with lived experience of incarceration, LGBTQ+ communities, among others.

We are also interested in cross-cutting and interdisciplinary approaches to understanding and addressing stigma. To begin to move beyond siloed approaches to stigma reduction, and in recognition of the significant work that has been done on mental health stigma including the impending launch of the National Stigma and Discrimination Reduction Strategy by the National Mental Health Commission, we invite people working to address mental health stigma to submit abstracts on their work.

Program and Care Protocol

The conference program and conference care protocol are available at the links below.
(updated 12 November)


Registration

Registration is now closed.Ìý

The conference is being held in person at UNSW Sydney, 21 to 22 November 2024.

Type of registration Fees (AUD)
General early bird admission (up to 25 October 2024) $380
General admission (from 26 October 2024) $440
One day general admission $300
Student admission $320
One day student admission $200

Tickets can only be purchased by credit or debit card. If you require an invoice prior to purchase, please send an email with your name, organisation, mailing address, and the ticket type that you wish to purchase to

Note:ÌýRefunds will be determined on a case-by-case basis by emailing stigmaconference@unsw.edu.au
No refunds will be processed after 7 November 2024.

Venue

Colombo Building (B16)
High St Gate 4 (entrance on Fig Tree lane)
UNSW Sydney, Kensington NSW 2052

Public transport is available via light rail and bus. For public transport route and payment options see:Ìý

For information on parking on campus, please see:Ìý

All conference spaces within the Colombo Building are wheelchair accessible, and wheelchair accessible toilet facilities are available.

Gender-neutral toilets are available at the venue.

UNSW is located on the unceded territory of the Bedegal (Kensington campus), Gadigal (City and Paddington Campuses) and Ngunnawal peoples (UNSW Canberra) who are the Traditional Custodians of the lands where each campus of UNSW is situated.

Abstract Submission

Abstract submission is now closed.

The Tackling Stigma Conference is now accepting submissions for abstracts. Priority will be given to submissions that emphasise action on tackling stigma, including novel programs, campaigns, and interventions, and that champion and centre lived experience and the voices of those affected by stigma.

Guidelines

Abstracts can be submitted for oral presentations only; there will be no poster presentations or workshops during this conference. Presentations will be 15 minutes with 5 minutes question time. We may also offer shorter presentations of 5-7 minutes for rapid sessions.There are two types of submissions we are accepting and we have provided templates for you to use to create your abstracts:

1. Research Abstract – abstracts on original research findings, case studies, completed projects, and theoretical analyses.ÌýDownload the template below.

2. Practice and Policy Abstract – non-research based abstracts on programs, community engagement, education, health promotion, and policy.ÌýDownload the template below.

All abstracts must be submitted directly through our online submissions form below.

  • Abstracts must be submitted in English.Ìý
  • Abstracts must not exceed 300 words, and each abstract must only be submitted once.Ìý
  • Abstracts should be text only; photos, tables or other images will not be accepted.
  • Abstracts for quantitative and qualitative research must be structured, i.e. divided into sections: Introduction, Methods/Approach, Findings, and Implications. These headings are suggestions only and you may use your preferred headings.ÌýPlease refer toÌýExample 1.
  • Non-research related abstracts for presentations that discuss community or health-related programs and practice must also be structured. Please refer toÌýExample 2.
  • The abstract will be reproduced directly from the typescript. Corrections cannot be made once the abstract has been submitted. Please proofread carefully before submission.Ìý
  • Include all authors' names and the name of each institution represented by the authors on your abstract.ÌýÌýÌý
  • Abstract submissions will be peer reviewed. The Conference Organising Committee will have the final decision on which abstracts are accepted.Ìý Authors will be notified of their abstract acceptance status from late August 2024.Ìý

Accepted abstracts will be uploaded to the Conference website as part of the program.

If you would like assistance in developing your abstract for submission, please contact stigmaconference@unsw.edu.au

Please note that all presenters will need to register for the conference following acceptance of an abstract or session.

Please contact the conference organisers at stigmaconference@unsw.edu.au if you wish to propose a conference symposium.ÌýÌý

Language guidelines

All submissions should aim to use non-stigmatising language. We encourage the use of person-centred and inclusive language throughout your abstract and presentation. Please refer to the following language guides when developing your abstract and presentation.



Scholarships

Scholarship applications are now closed.

We are pleased to announce the availability of community scholarships for people within Australia to attend the Tackling Stigma Conference at UNSW Sydney, 21-22 November 2024. These scholarships are designated for people with lived experience or who are part of communities that have been subject to stigma in health care setting.

The scholarship will cover registration fees. We request that you indicate what other funding you may require to facilitate your attendance, and these will be considered with your application. At this time, we are only able to provide scholarships to people residing in Australia.

The CSRH scholarship program relies on funding from commercial, government, and non-government sources. The scholarship applications are reviewed by the Conference Organising Committee. Commercial sponsors are not involved in or consulted on the scholarship scoring process.Ìý

All applicants must complete the application truthfully and advise the Conference Secretariat if their situation changes.Ìý

Key Selection Criteria

Applicants must:

  1. Have lived experience, work with, and/or are part of communities that have been subject to stigma in health care settings. This includes: people living with HIV, viral hepatitis, or mental health issues; people who use drugs; sex workers; people with culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, or Indigenous peoples;ÌýÌý
  2. Be engaged in community education, support, or advocacy activities;
  3. Be aged 18 years or older; and
  4. Live within Australia.

Assessment of applications

  • An assessment panel will review all applications after the closing date, using the above selection criteria.
  • Applications received after the specified closing date will not be considered.
  • Successful and unsuccessful applicants will be notified in August 2024.
  • Unsuccessful candidates will be placed on a wait-list and further offers will be made if scholarship places become available.

Processing of successful applications

  • Successful applicants will be notified of the outcome of their application in August 2024.
  • Successful applicants will be required to indicate their acceptance within two weeks of being notified
  • Once the acceptance form has been completed and signed, the successful candidate will be registered and will receive notification of this
  • If the applicant does not accept the offer within two weeks, the offer may be withdrawn and the scholarship may be granted to another candidate.

How to apply

  1. Read the scholarship application information above includingÌýKey Selection Criteria
  2. Complete the online scholarship application form (available below)
  3. Please attach to your application an email or letter of support for you to attend the conference from your organisation or an alternative referee.
  4. Closing date for applications isÌýWednesday 14th August 2024, applicants will be notified in late August 2024.

FAQ

  • All conference spaces are wheelchair accessible, and an accessible toilet is available.
    The venue is adjacent to High Street and has vehicular access.
    Hearing loops are available in the lecture theatres.

  • The conference will be held as in-person only, with no hybrid capacity.

  • If you wish to receive a certificate of attendance, please email the conference team atÌýstigmaconference@unsw.edu.au

  • If you have any other questions, please email the conference team atÌýstigmaconference@unsw.edu.au


Tackling Stigma Conference is proudly supported by Gilead Sciences
and UNSW Arts, Design & Architecture

Other sponsors

Our Acknowledgement of Country

UNSW Sydney’s Kensington campus is built on the land of the Aboriginal people. We pay our respects to the Bedegal people of the Eora nation who are the Custodians of this land.Ìý

We acknowledge the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, the First Australians, whose lands, winds and waters we all now share, and pay respect to their unique values, and their continuing and enduring cultures which deepen and enrich the life of our nation and communities.