La Trobe

Social movements and the Whitlam-initiated community health movement in Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-08, 02:50 authored by Fran Baum, Connie Musolino, Toby Freeman, Denise Fry, Paul Laris, Virginia LewisVirginia Lewis, David Legge, Jenny Macmillan, Tony McBride
<p dir="ltr">Background: This paper examines the social movements that influenced the development and implementation of the original Whitlam Government Community Health Program, the community health movement that emerged, and the opportunities it created for people to develop and deliver health programs in new ways. Methods: Oral history interviews with 93 people involved in community health in South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales, and 212 community health policy and archival documents were collected as a part of an Australian Research Council study documenting the history of community health services in Australia since the 1970s. Results: Ideas about community health in Australia were influenced by several social movements that had overlapping, but distinctive, contributions: (1) left-wing movements: political parties, workers’ health; trade unions, anti-war and anti-establishment; (2) international social medicine and community-oriented primary care; (3) Indigenous rights/Black Power; (4) feminist; and (5) community development/community power. These movements influenced Australian community health to embrace community management, advocacy and community development strategies in addition to multi-disciplinary care. However, these progressive elements were undermined by neo-liberal management reforms and medical opposition to elements of the Community Health Program. Conclusions: The early passion for community health in the 1970s and 1980s was fuelled by social movements, but the inconsistent support from the federal and most state governments limited progressive and innovative community health practice. The window of opportunity for the Community Health Program was supported by progressive social movements, but restricted from the 1990s onwards.</p>

Funding

This study was funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Special Initiatives Grant SR200200920.

History

Publication Date

2025-09-25

Journal

Australian Journal of Primary Health

Volume

31

Issue

5

Article Number

PY24167

Pagination

13p.

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

ISSN

1448-7527

Rights Statement

© 2025 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of La Trobe University. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND).