womens health west
annual report 2013-2014
About
womens health west
contents
Vision, Mission and Values
Year at a Glance
Chair and CEO Report
Treasurers Report
201314 Achievements Measured Against the Strategic
Plan
Family Violence Services
Family Violence Services Data
Intake
Outreach
24-Hour Crisis Response
Court Support
Intensive Case Management
Disability Intensive Case Management
A Place To Call Home
Crisis Accommodation Service
Private Rental Brokerage
Safe At Home
Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Housing
Victims Assistance Counselling
Childrens Counselling
Family Violence Regional Integration Coordination
Health Promotion
Prevention of Violence Against Women
Preventing Violence Together United: Western
Region Action Plan to Prevent Violence Against
Women
You, Me and Us: Respectful Relationships through
Peer Education
Mental Health and Wellbeing
Our Community, Our Rights
Lead On Again
Sunrise Womens Groups
Power On
Financial Literacy
Client and Community Participation Strategy
Sexual and Reproductive Health Promotion
Action for Equity
Family and Reproductive Rights Education Project
Western English Language School Human Relations
Girls Talk Guys Talk
Influencing Change
Training and Development
Presentations
Communications
Our Staff
Key Partnerships
Governance
Financial Reports
Acronyms and Table of Figures
3
3
4
6
7
9
10
12
12
13
13
14
14
15
15
16
16
17
18
19
20
22
23
24
25
26
26
27
27
28
29
30
30
31
32
33
34
35
38
39
42
43
Womens Health West (WHW) is the
womens health service for the western
metropolitan region of Melbourne.
We have two main programs that
complement each other allowing us to
work across the continuum from preventing
problems, to responding to problems after
they occur.
Our health promotion program plans and
implements activities designed to promote
womens health, safety and wellbeing across
three key areas sexual and reproductive
health, mental health, and prevention of
violence and discrimination.
Our family violence service provides women
and children who experience family violence
with the range of services they require while
in crisis such as court support, crisis
housing and case management through to
services designed to promote healing and
recovery, such as womens and childrens
counselling.
We work collaboratively with communities,
government and local agencies, and
provide secondary consultation for health,
community and other service providers.
WHW is funded by a mix of government
grants, principally from the Department of
Human Services and the Department of
Health, as well as other sources including
benevolent trusts and philanthropic
organisations.
WHW is an equal opportunity employer
with a VCAT Exemption A128/2012 (under
Equal Opportunity Act 1995) to employ only
women. We employ 63 women with a range
of qualifications, skills and life experiences
as part of our diverse staff team. WHW is
centrally managed from Footscray.
WHW is incorporated under the Associations
Incorporation Act 1981. We are a Public
Benevolent Institution endorsed as a
Deductible Gift Recipient and therefore
entitled to receive tax deductible donations,
which you can make at http://whwest.org.au/
about-us/donations/
All women living, working or studying in the
western metropolitan region of Melbourne
are eligible for membership of WHW, as are
organisations whose client base includes the
western region.
Our strategic plan outlines our focus on
redressing the social, economic and political
factors that limit the lives of women. We do
this through a range of actions designed to
influence public policy or change legislation,
improve access to services and resources,
and build women and girls capacity to take
positions of leadership.
Vision
Equity and justice for women in the west
Mission
We work together for change by supporting
women and their children to lead safe and
healthy lives, and changing the conditions
that cause and maintain inequity and injustice
Year at a glance
6,209
Police referrals
+54%
Values
We work within a feminist framework,
respecting human rights
We act to ensure that women have control over
their decisions and their lives
We recognise that the conditions in which
people live, work and play are determined
by political, social and economic forces
that must be understood and acted upon to
achieve better outcomes for health, safety and
wellbeing
We value the diversity of our region and work
to actively recognise and respect womens
diverse strengths, experiences and goals
We value transparency and accountability in
our operations, practices and relationships with
others
We recognise that childrens health, safety and
wellbeing is intrinsically connected to that of
women
We also value the rights of children and
recognise their individual needs
We recognise the importance of being
responsive to the changing needs of our
community
We recognise and value the expertise of others
and the vital importance of working together to
achieve our goals
1,247
Women supported
at court
+87%
5,101
Telephone supports
+33%
2,721
Young people attended
You, Me and Us
respectful relationships
education sessions
30
Sexual and reproductive health
strategies committed to by
17 partner agencies as part of the
regional plan led by WHW
Womens Health Wests catchment consists of seven local
government areas: Brimbank, Hobsons Bay, Maribyrnong,
Melbourne, Melton, Moonee Valley and Wyndham
3
chair and CEO report
We are pleased to present the Womens Health West annual report for 20132014. This
informative report provides an account of our operational and financial performance for the
year 1 July 2013 to 30 June 2014 to government and other funding bodies, as well as to our
members, community, staff and partners. The format of the report allows transparency in
comparing goals, objectives and outcomes across annual reports over the past five years,
ensuring a strongly accountable organisation.
Samantha Merrigan
Acting Chair
Dr Robyn Gregory
CEO
Womens Health West
is a financially healthy
organisation that continues to
meet the increasing demands
of women and children
experiencing family violence,
and to research and respond
to the needs of the most
isolated and disadvantaged
groups of women in our
region. The greatest challenge
in the previous year has been
the impact of that demand
on our ability to meet client
need. A 54 per cent increase
in police referrals in 201314
alone adds to an everincreasing need for services,
with a 256 per cent increase
over the past four years. At
the same time, family violence
funds to Womens Health West
increased by only 25 per cent.
Womens Health West aims
for clarity and accountability
in our presentation of
service data. As a result,
we not only measure our
performance against service
delivery targets, but also
offer a consistent format of
presenting our objectives for
each program, the strategies
employed to achieve those
objectives, and the outcomes
of those strategies, allowing
progress to be tracked over
subsequent years. This is
complemented by setting
future directions for our
programs that allow the
reader to track achievements
and understand the factors
that impact on our plans.
The annual report provides
clear evidence that Womens
Health West has continued to
provide and further develop
programs and services that
are highly responsive to the
diverse and changing needs
of women and children in our
region.
Financial sustainability
Additional funds for health
promotion projects along
with ongoing family violence
funding expanded our
4
income to $4.5 million. Sound
fiscal management meant
that we met, and in many
cases exceeded, the targets
of our funding bodies, and
posted a surplus of $6,700.
While the knowledge that
women are increasingly
choosing to report criminal
assault in the home is
overwhelmingly positive, the
impact on demand ensures
that service delivery targets
are well-exceeded, putting
pressure on the budget
and again requiring the
diversion of resources from
case management to crisis
response. The long-term
impact of responding to
crises at the expense of case
management is yet to be
researched, although we do
regularly consider whether
more concerted support
following a crisis might
prevent clients from cycling in
and out of the service system,
supporting their recovery and
avoiding the homelessness
and intergenerational
disadvantage that follows.
Similarly, Womens Health
West would welcome
much greater investment
in prevention of mens
violence against women as
a component of a long-term
strategy to not only reduce
service demand but, more
importantly, create nonviolent, gender-equitable and
respectful communities.
The financial statements have
been audited and prepared
in accordance with Australian
Accounting Standards
and are presented at the
back of this report for your
information. An additional
audit of Womens Health
Wests acquittals for the
period 20102014 was also
conducted, finding the files
well-presented and up-todate, with no requirements
for additional reports from the
auditor.
As part of our professional
development program,
we focus on continuously
increasing our financial
knowledge. This also
reflects the importance to
the board of all directors
being supported to fulfill
their responsibilities to
monitor the financial health
and accountability of the
organisation. This year new
board directors, managers
and coordinators undertook a
financial reporting workshop .
Achievements
In the past twelve months,
our family violence program
experienced a 54 per cent
increase in police referrals
compared to a 35 per cent
increase in the previous year.
This resulted in attending to
over 6,200 police referrals
alone. We were able to
support 10 per cent more
women through case
management and provided
childrens counselling to 205
children who experienced
violence, a 38 per cent
increase on the previous year.
On 2 October 2013
Parliamentary Secretary for
Health, Georgie Crozier,
launched Action for Equity,
our plan to improve sexual
and reproductive health in the
region.
Our Community Our
Rights, implemented from
20112014, strengthened
the capacity of refugee and
migrant women to respond
to and prevent human rights
violations experienced by
their communities, while
You, Me and Us delivered
123 respectful relationships
education sessions to 2,721
young people across the
region.
Significant organisational
activity was also undertaken
throughout the year
to prepare for our first
surveillance audit, which
will take place in August
2014 through Australian
Healthcare Associates
Quality Certification Services.
Embedding a culture of
continuous improvement
throughout the organisation
has been the responsibility of
the quality committee, led by
our Business Manager, Lara
Polak.
Partnerships
Womens Health Wests
commitment to partnerships
is strongly embedded in our
strategic plan, as it is in our
day-to-day activities. Our
emphasis on the importance
of local, regional and
statewide partnerships to
achieving our vision of equity
and justice for women in the
west is evident at a number
of levels. One of those is the
strength and reach of our two
regional action plans: Action
for Equity and Preventing
Violence Together United.
Each action plan reflects the
collaborative work of many
partner agencies. Another key
partnership is the Western
Integrated Family Violence
Partnership for women
and children, which meets
regularly via a governance
and an operations group to
coordinate the delivery of
seamless services to women
and children who experience
family violence.
Womens Health West also
participated in a new project
designed to identify the
barriers to employment for
DHS clients in Maribyrnong,
work to reduce those barriers
and identify employment
opportunities. This two-year
project, in collaboration with
Maribyrnong City Council
and the Maribyrnong and
Moonee Valley Local Learning
and Employment Network,
is a unique opportunity to
focus on the employment
needs of women who
experience family violence,
given our knowledge that
their circumstances can
create significant barriers to
employment.
Governance
In the coming financial year
Womens Health West will
commence consultations for
the development of our next
strategic plan. The board of
directors is looking forward
to building on the strengths
of our partnerships to lead
a participatory method for
evaluating the previous
plan and engaging with our
communities of interest to
ensure that the strategic plan
is informed and responsive.
At Womens Health West
we support the capacity
of the board to lead our
strategic direction through
the production of regular
environmental scans that
analyse local, state, national
and international policy and
funding contexts. Guided by
a thorough analysis of the
Similarly, our regular and
context in which our service
active participation in the
operates, board directors
Western Think Child Working
accompanied the CEO and
Group, the Local Area
other staff to meetings with
Service Networks, HealthWest members of parliament in the
Partnership and the Inner
western region. This activity,
North West Primary Care
arising out of our board
Partnership demonstrate
advocacy plan, provided
our commitment to regional
excellent opportunities to
service coordination and
outline service demand
population health planning,
and the needs of women,
while our particular
children and communities in
involvement with the Womens our region. Directors were
Health Association of Victoria, particularly buoyed by the
Domestic Violence Victoria,
new national Foundation to
and VCOSS are integral to our Prevent Violence against
ability to positively influence
Women and their Children,
public policy and legislation
as well as the commitment of
to bring about more equitable sitting members to follow up
outcomes for women and
the critical topic of preventing
children.
and responding to family
violence.
Gratitude
Womens Health West
could not undertake our
work without the funds
we receive from the state
and federal governments.
We thank the Minister for
Community Services, Mary
Wooldridge, in particular, for
her extraordinary commitment
to vulnerable women and
children, along with her
tireless efforts to provide
responsive funding models.
We also rely on philanthropic
agencies and trusts such
as the RE Ross Trust and
the fundraising efforts
of generous groups and
individuals in our community.
Three deserving special
mention are the Zonta Club,
who have supported Womens
Health West and, through us,
women and children leaving
situations of family violence
for many years; Women of
the West, whose fabulous
events are not only wonderful
opportunities for women to
build connections and have
fun, but have also raised
much-needed funds; and
Wealthy Wise Women and
staff from the Bendigo Bank,
who support our financial
literacy program for newlyarrived refugees.
Future directions
Our priority continues to be
the delivery of responsive,
value-for-money services
that are evidence-based,
woman-centred, accountable
and innovative, to meet the
needs of our community. This
encompasses continuing
to work alongside our
partners, including the state
and federal government,
primary care partnerships,
peak bodies, formal service
delivery partners, and
individuals and agencies in
the community. Our ability
to do this will be enhanced
by ongoing implementation
of our client and community
participation strategy.
expected wage rises, have all
impacted on staff morale and
our ability to retain staff. We
have listened to the concerns
of staff, are acting on their
ideas for improvement and
will continue to develop
and implement a planned
response in tandem with staff.
We are also planning for the
receipt of family violence
funds announced following
the May budget, including
those targeted to to improve
our ability to respond to
women and children at high
risk of family violence.
One of our key objectives
remains finding long-term,
secure and sustainable
accommodation for the
continued delivery of our
services. The problem of
securing sustainable and
affordable accommodation
in an accessible location
has been a critical topic for
Womens Health West for
some years, particularly in
the face of increasing service
demand unmatched by funds
and impacted by spiraling
infrastructure costs. We are
continuing to explore options
and thank Arden Joseph and
the team at Maribyrnong City
Council for assisting us in this
process.
With a renewed board
of directors, including
newly-appointed members
Catherine Harding and Nicola
Rabt, whose expertise
and commitment to the
organisation, along with our
hard-working and committed
staff, and our partners,
united by a common purpose
equity and justice for
women in the western region
Womens Health West is
well-placed for the future.
The extraordinary rise in
service demand without
additional resources to cope
with that demand, coupled
with disappointment that the
funding model prepared to
implement the pay equity
case did not result in
5
Treasurers report
The financial report for Womens Health West indicates a solid year in an
atmosphere of fiscal uncertainty, with an increase in income of $670,000
bringing our total revenue to $4.5 million (revenue in 201213 was $3.8
million). Correspondingly, program activity increased which left a small
surplus of $6,700 that reflects sound financial management within the
organisation.
Karen Passey
Treasurer
Figure 1.
An increase in state government operating grants followed the Victorian
Governments ongoing response to the significant increase in demand for
family violence support services. Grants obtained last year through our
health promotion arm continue to sustain programs to enhance respectful
relationships and prevent violence against women; both key areas of
expertise that Womens Health West has built over some years.
Government funding represents around 96 per cent of our overall income
directly associated with program delivery (figure 1). The remaining $166,000
comes from other grants, interest earned and donations. Close to 73 per
cent of our expenditure is linked to the provision of skilled staff and resources
to deliver our funding and service agreements designed to support and
enhance the health, safety and wellbeing of women in our community (figure
2).
Womens Health West is committed to continuous improvement and has a
robust quality management system in place that is supported by regular
reviews of policies, procedures, incidents, corrective and preventive
actions and continuous improvement suggestions. Following successful
certification as an ISO accredited quality organisation and as part of our
continual commitment to quality, Womens Health West prepared for its
first annual surveillance audit to be conducted by Australian Healthcare
Associates Quality Certification Services in August 2014. Surveillance audits
occur annually with a full audit being conducted every three years for recertification purposes.
Figure 2.
Total revenue for 2013-14 is $4,496,349
with a growth of 17.5 per cent in
comparison to last year.
The board has overall responsibility for the establishment and oversight of
the risk management framework. The board has established the Finance and
Risk Committee, which assists the board in overseeing the development and
monitoring of risk management policies. The committee reports regularly to
the board on its activities. This year the committee has further improved the
quality of the board reports to enhance their ability to monitor and mitigate
risks. The board also continues to follow a sound investment strategy to
ensure strong fiscal management of our assets.
In 201415 we expect that financial conditions for all not-forprofit
organisations will remain tight as state budgets are under pressure with
increasing demand without a growing revenue base. The Womens Health
West management team and board of directors will continue to closely
monitor our performance through the coming year to ensure we maximise the
use of our funds through responsible management.
I encourage you to read our annual report which demonstrates sound
financial management that enables Womens Health West to continue to
deliver an extraordinarily broad range of projects and programs for women
and children in the west.
201314 ACHIEVEMENTS
MEASURED AGAINST THE STRATEGIC PLAN
Our strategic plan outlines our focus on redressing the social, economic and political factors that limit the lives of
women. We do this through a range of actions designed to influence public policy or change legislation, improve
access to services and resources, and build women and girls capacity to take positions of leadership.
STRATEGIC GOAL 1
Delivering and advocating
for accessible and culturally
appropriate services and resources
for women and their children
We will engage in actions such as
advocacy, research, organisational
capacity building, direct service
delivery and community development
to enhance women and childrens
access to resources and services
Deliver community development
programs for women from a range of
backgrounds
Delivered the third iteration of Our
Community, Our Rights human rights
action program with 14 women
from India who went on to produce
resources tailored to the concerns of
their particular community (p.24)
Delivered Lead On Again, a strengthsbased leadership program, with 14
young CALD women gaining skills
in public speaking, teamwork and
communication through the 5-day
workshop (p.25)
Delivered financial literacy training to
19 women from the Oromo community
in Flemington. Participants reported
increased confidence and benefits from
sharing ideas (p.27)
Deliver family violence services to
women and children from a range of
backgrounds
205 children received immediate family
violence counselling; an increase of 37
per cent (p.18)
1,247 women received court support;
an increase of 87 per cent (p.13)
Supported 53 women from CALD
backgrounds to live safe from family
violence by providing housing support
tailored to their needs (p.16)
35 women received intensive case
management support, including 13
women living with a disability (p.14)
STRATEGIC GOAL 2
STRATEGIC GOAL 3
We will undertake direct service
provision and health promotion
actions to improve the social and
economic conditions that determine
the health, safety and wellbeing of
women and their children
We will advocate change to the
social, political and economic
factors that cause and maintain
oppression of women
Improving the conditions in which
women live, work and play in the
western region of Melbourne
Assist women to break the cycle of
family violence by providing tailored
direct services
Provided 5,101 clients with telephone
support, an increase of 33 per cent
(p.12)
Victoria Police submitted 6,209 referrals
to Womens Health West, an increase of
54 per cent (p.13)
Supported 85 women and 111 children
to remain in their home by coordinating
home safety strategies including lock
changes, door and window repairs, and
personal alarms (p.16)
Provided 32 women with financial
assistance to obtain or remain in private
rental housing, preventing them from
experiencing homelessness as a result
of family violence (p.15)
Putting womens health, safety
and wellbeing on the political
agenda to improve the status of
women
Engage individuals and communities
to bring about improvements to
womens health, safety and wellbeing
Featured in 63 stories in local and
state newspapers and on SBS
television news (p.34)
Built Twitter presence by 78 per cent
and more than doubled our number of
Facebook likes (p.34)
Participated in 19 opportunities to
influence public policy including
written submissions to local councils
promoting gender-responsive
budgeting, contributing to the review
of the national curriculum in relation
to respectful relationships education,
and participation in community
consultation on GLBTI health and
wellbeing (p.31)
Delivered 30 presentations to 1,814
attendees, a 27 per cent increase in
reach since the previous year (p.33)
Undertake health promotion activities
designed to improve womens health,
safety and wellbeing
Delivered 123 respectful relationships
education sessions to 2,721 young
people through the You, Me and Us
program (p.23)
Produced a Preventing Cervical Cancer
resource in partnership with PapScreen
Victoria that was delivered to 26 African
women who have experienced FGM/C
(p.29)
Established a community of practice
with 26 health professionals, supporting
our whole-of-school approach to
building school environments that
promote healthier relationships and
sexual choices (p.30)
Delivered financial literacy training to
19 women from the Oromo community
in Flemington. Participants reported
increased confidence and benefits from
sharing ideas (p.26)
7
STRATEGIC GOAL 4
Recognising that good health,
safety and wellbeing begins in our
workplace
We will provide a sustainable
workplace that is healthy and
safe, where people are valued
and developed, where we
understand our limits, have
clear accountabilities, and are
encouraged to be creative and
innovative
Continue to support staff professional
development
Staff attended 238 professional
development sessions (p.32)
Monitor staff expectations and
experiences
We undertook a staff climate survey to
pinpoint our strengths and weaknesses
and identify opportunities for improving
the organisational culture
Review organisational needs
We commenced an independent
review of our operational needs
following organisational growth,
including finance, administration and
reception, human resources and quality
improvement
STRATEGIC GOAL 5
Working with others to achieve
our goals
We value the skills, knowledge
and expertise of individuals,
organisations, and communities
in our region and will work in
collaboration with them, sharing
what we learn along the way and
identifying where we each fit in
achieving our goals
Increase and enhance our
partnerships
Board member of HealthWest
Partnership and governance group
member of Inner North West Primary
Care Partnership (p.38)
Represents WHAV on Statewide
Violence against Women and Children
Forum (p.38)
Chair of the Think Child Working Group
(p.38)
Advisory Board, Centre for Gender,
Womens Health and Society University
of Melbourne (p.38)
Advisory Board, Social Work Unit,
Victoria University (p.38)
Implement region-wide strategies
The Preventing Violence Together
United partnership continued to grow
with the addition of Western Region
Centre Against Sexual Assault and
cohealth (p.22)
Partners have committed to work
that advances 30 of the 35 Action
for Equity strategies in relation to
condom vending machines, medication
abortion, sexual rights and gender
diversity, women in and exiting
prison, as well as Aboriginal youth in
Melbournes west (p.28)
Work with Womens Health Association
of Victoria to broaden our influence
Womens Health West worked with
WHAV to develop Priorities for Victorian
Womens Health 20142018, with
recommendations for the womens
health policy and action platform in
the lead-up to the 2014 state election
(p.38)
This list shows selected actions
we have taken over the last twelve
months to achieve our strategic
goals. Progress is indicated using
the following key:
COMPLETED
IN PROGRESS
Family violence services
Over the past year Womens Health West has excelled in an environment of ever-increasing demand for our family
violence services. We are particularly proud of the commitment and energy of staff as we report the following
highlights against our strategic goals.
Delivering and advocating for
accessible and culturally appropriate
services and resources for women
across the region
Womens Health West is the regional
access point for women and their
children experiencing family violence.
Police referrals to Womens Health West
increased by 54 per cent this year
following a 35 per cent increase the
previous year (figure 6). During 201314
our intake service provided one-off
telephone support to 5,101 women, a
33 per cent increase on the previous
reporting period (figure 7). To cope with
the growing demand without additional
funding, we have implemented a triage
system that provides women assessed
at extreme, high and elevated risk of
fatality or serious injury with priority of
service. The impact of this system on
the longterm outcomes for women
and children who experience family
violence will require future investigation.
The diversity of the western region
population is mirrored in the cultural
breakdown of women accessing our
services; 47 per cent of women who
received case management support
identified as coming from a CALD
background, 5 per cent identified as
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Island.
Improving the conditions in which
women live, work and play in the
western region of Melbourne
Womens Health West provided
longterm family violence support
and housing to eight women and their
children through the A Place to Call
Home program that supports minimal
disruptions for families by turning
their transitional housing property into
longterm housing (see page 14).
Working with others to achieve our
goals
Our family violence outreach workers
continued to work with Relationships
Australias mens behavioural
change programs in Sunshine to
provide services to women who
have experienced family violence
and enhance relationships between
womens and mens services.
Womens Health West chaired the
Western Think Child Working Group to
improve links between family violence,
child protection, Child FIRST and
family support agencies. The outcome
is a revised partnership agreement
that has strengthened referral
processes. A successful partnership
between Womens Health West, mens
behavioural change programs and
Victoria Police enabled this years
launch of the High Risk Client Strategy
Pilot 2008-2010: Evaluation Report,
which highlighted the strengths of
the extreme (high) risk client model in
coordinating responses to women at
immediate risk of severe violence or
death as a result of family violence.
Putting womens health, safety and
wellbeing on the political agenda to
improve the status of women
In July 2013 Womens Health West
submitted a response to the Shergold
discussion paper regarding service
sector reform, Towards a more effective
and sustainable community services
system. We emphasised the importance
of specialist support services for women
and children who have experienced
family violence trauma and suggested
ways that family violence specialist
services can work in collaboration with
child protection, family support services
and other mainstream community
services.Throughout 201314 we
continued to provide clear and
unequivocal information to government
about the requirement for additional
resources to meet the demand created
by exponentially increasing police
reports of family violence incidents.
We also highlighted the severe and
traumatic consequences of family
violence for women and children.
As well as meeting with relevant
ministers, bureaucrats and members of
parliament, we responded to journalist
requests following release of police
statistics that resulted in 33 family
violence related stories.
Recognising that good health, safety
and wellbeing begin in the workplace
The impact of sustained service
demand without additional resources
also impacts on staff members, who
reported significant levels of stress
and overwork in trying to meet the
demand. In May we held a professional
development day to explore and
discuss how family violence trauma
impacts on clients, workers and the
organisation as a whole. We are
currently developing a trauma-informed
organisational model to further support
our clients and staff.
Future directions
In June 2014 the Victorian Government
announced that the strengthening risk
management project already piloted in
Geelong and Hume will be rolled out
more widely over the coming months
with the introduction of Risk Assessment
and Management Panels (RAMPs)
across the state. RAMPs bring together
police, the courts, family violence and
family services to keep women and
children at high risk of violence safe
and hold perpetrators to account. We
are awaiting information about the
rollout of RAMPs in 201415.
9
Family violence services data
Figure 3. Comparing Womens Health Wests family violence data over five years
PROGRAMS
Access point and intake (# of contacts)
2013-14
2012-13
2011-12
2010-11
2009-10
Intake one-off telephone support
Intake appointments and drop in
Intake secondary consultations
5,101
374
673
3,825
366
755
3,507
328
1,068
1,882
361
748
2,193
191
825
After hours
Business hours
24-hour crisis response (# of contacts)
6,148
200
427
4,946
144
344
4,903
140
127
2,991
216
75
3,209
110
N/A
Weekday received
Weekend received
Total police referrals received
4,563
1,646
6,209
3,288
737
4,025
2,288
698
2,986
1,938
424
2,362
1,609
N/A
1,609
1,247
437
665
396
726
275
762
314
634
379
55
79
53
8
59
88
57
6
43
69*
49
8
51
199
52
7
79
237
48
N/A
205
50
149
29
103
48
110
44
86
39
35
32
19
85
19
32
8
57
17
35
6
34
13
46
5
32
26
39
6
N/A
Police referrals (# of clients)
Outreach (# of clients)
Court support
Case management
Crisis accommodation (# of clients)
Refuge
Accompanying children
CALD housing program
A place to call home
Counselling (# of clients)
Children
Victims assistance counselling program
Other programs (# of clients)
Intensive case management
Private rental brokerage
Housing options
Safe at home
*Difference in number of accompanying children is due to a change in data collection (previously children were counted according to each program they accessed, current methods
count them at a single point)
Figure 4. Court support 20092014
10
Figure 5. Housing outcomes for CALD women 20112014
Figure 6. Victoria Police referrals 20062014
Figure 8. Cultural identity of outreach clients 2013/14
Figure 7. Intake service access type 20112014
Figure 9. Intake contacts by local government area 20112014
11
intake
Intake workers are the first point of contact for women
entering family violence services. We offer a telephone
or face-to-face crisis response and coordinate referrals
both within Womens Health West and to other services.
Intake also provides a critical coordination role by
responding to police faxback referrals, requests for
secondary consultation, coordinating court support for
clients, and monitoring the case management services
waiting list.
outreach
Outreach case managers provide specialist crisis
and transitional support to women and their children
experiencing family violence by coordinating resources
relating to housing, legal, health and other matters
required to support their long-term safety.
Objective
Minimise the impact of family violence by providing women
and children in the western region with access to timely and
relevant services and resources
Objective
Strategies
Provide a well-coordinated central access point for women
and childrens family violence services in the western region
1. Provide 652 periods of case management support to
women and their children
2. Improve access for isolated women by out-posting
case managers to outer western growth corridors e.g.
Werribee and Melton. Facilitate client engagement by
out-posting workers to locations in North Melbourne and
Carlton
3. Develop strong partnerships with agencies across seven
local government areas to facilitate professional and
service development networks
4. Deliver tailored information sessions to relevant agencies
and groups to enable local communities to recognise
and respond appropriately to the needs of women and
children who experience family violence
Strategies
1. Conduct telephone and face-to-face risk assessments
2. Support the 24-hour crisis response team to respond to
faxback referrals from local police
3. Provide specialist family violence secondary
consultations (average of 12 per week) to other service
providers
4. Continue to advocate for specific funding for the intake
service
Outcomes
1. Provided support to women and children in crisis
including 5,101 one-off telephone consultations, 374
face-to-face (drop ins and appointment) and 2,335
instances of case coordination including interim support
to those awaiting case management allocation (figures
3 and 7)
2. Provided 741 instances of support in responding to
police referral
3. Provided 673 secondary consultations to external
service providers. The decrease outlined in figure
7 demonstrates the need to divert resources from
secondary consultations to telephone support and case
coordination to meet increasing service demand
4. Raised the topic of intake-specific funding at all
meetings with Department of Human Services
Future directions
Continue to divert resources from secondary consultations to
telephone support and case coordination to meet sustained
and exponential increases in demand
Outcomes
1. Provided case management services to 437 individual
women and their accompanying children. The remainder
of our targets were diverted to an unfunded intake
service that provided 6,148 instances of support
(see figure 3). Case managers provided women with
coordinated practical assistance, consistent risk
assessments and safety planning
2. Provided 238 instances of support at our outpost
locations in Melton, Werribee, North Melbourne and
Carlton; a 24 per cent increase on the previous reporting
period. Our commitment to providing services at
outposts has ensured that isolated women have access
to support
3. Outreach workers continue to strengthen partnerships
with legal services, police, housing, Centrelink, child
protection services, family and youth services by
attending family violence network meetings across the
region. Our partnership with Lifeworks and Relationships
Australia meant that 69 women accessed services
through partner contact at Mens Behaviour Change
programs
4. Provided 12 sessions of family violence community
education to 315 participants; sessions were targeted
to communities as well as agency workers. Feedback
indicated an increased capacity to recognise family
violence and to respond and refer appropriately
Future directions
Continue to explore effective methods for managing service
demand
12
If it wasnt for your
information and
encouragement,
I would still be
putting up with
his violence
Woman supported at court
24-Hour Crisis Response
Court Support
Family violence regularly occurs after 5pm and on the
weekend, making the 24-hour crisis response program
an essential component of our service. It provides
immediate face-to-face support to women and their
accompanying children who are experiencing family
violence crisis at local police stations and hospitals.
A family violence intervention order protects a person
from a family member who is using family violence.
Women attending court for intervention orders often
require assistance.
Objective
Provide 24/7 crisis support to ensure that women and their
children receive appropriate information and advocacy when
they need it most
Strategies
1. Provide 146 crisis responses
2. Respond to weekend police referrals in collaboration
with McAuley Community Services for Women and
respond to weekday police referrals
3. Work with Victoria Police to use the extreme risk client
strategy to plan a response to women and their children
at imminent risk of serious injury or death
Outcomes
1. Delivered a total of 627 crisis responses: 427 during
business hours and 200 after hours (figure 3)
2. Received a total of 6,209 police faxback referrals from
Victoria Police, 54 per cent more than the previous year.
The weekend faxback referrals included in this figure
more than doubled from 737 to 1,646 (figures 3 and 6)
3. Supported 10 women and their children using the
extreme risk client strategy with police. All women
experienced positive outcomes including safety,
relocation to long-term safe housing or respondents
were charged and jailed for breaches to orders. This
is a direct result of the collaboration between police,
Womens Health West, and women themselves. The
number of women referred to the extreme risk client
strategy doubled this year
Future directions
Increased resources are urgently required to adequately
respond to families in crisis without compromising the high
quality of service Womens Health West currently delivers.
Objective
Support women at court to understand the court process and
their rights
Strategies
1. Provide an out-posted worker to three magistrates
courts in the western region to support a minimum of 77
women seeking intervention orders
2. Attend Sunshine court three days per week, Melbourne
court one day per week and Werribee court one day per
week
3. Attend bimonthly magistrates court user meetings to
provide feedback on womens experiences
Outcomes
1. Provided assistance to 1,247 women across three
courts; an 87.5 per cent increase on 201213
attributable to improved reporting mechanisms and the
marked increase in police referrals (figures 3 and 4)
2. Attendance at Sunshine court accounted for 61 per cent
of support provided, while Werribee and Melbourne
courts accounted for 34 per cent and 5 per cent
respectively
3. Attended bimonthly Sunshine, Melbourne and
Werribee magistrates court user meetings resulting
in strengthened partnerships with other attendees
including community legal services, Legal Aid,
magistrates, Court Network volunteers, and police
liaison workers
Future directions
Greater awareness of family violence in the community is
contributing to increased demand across all family violence
services, including court support. Womens Health West
will continue to outline the need for adequate resources
to respond to this demand. This includes the need for a
wellresourced court support program for women applying
for intervention orders.
13
Intensive Case Management
Disability Intensive Case
Management
Women with Disabilities Victorias 2014 Voices
Against Violence project found that gender-based and
disabilitybased discrimination intersect and increase
the risk of violence for women with disabilities. Barriers
such as language or disability not only render women
more vulnerable to violence but can also make it difficult
to access support services to leave violent relationships.
The intensive case management (ICM) service provides
family violence support to women and their children
with complex needs who experience multiple barriers to
accessing the service system.
Objective
Ensure women with multiple and complex needs receive
additional support to overcome family violence and
entrenched disadvantage, gain access to services and
secure safe and sustainable housing
Strategies
1. Provide ICM support for an average of six months for up
to 22 women/periods of support, including women with
a disability
2. Collaborate with ICM clients and other agencies to
develop case plans that build on womens individual
strengths and identify strategies agencies can employ to
reduce safety barriers
3. Identify when a woman is at escalated risk of severe
violence or death and initiate a high risk strategy to work
closely with the police and other agencies to reduce the
level of risk
Outcomes
1. Provided 35 women with intensive case management
support including 13 women with a disability
2. Worked with 11 ICM clients and collaborated with police
and other agencies to achieve identified case plan goals
and maintain womens safety
3. Supported 5 women through our high risk strategy
framework. All risks identified through the framework
have been lowered and all women are now living in the
community
Future directions
Continue to support Women with Disabilities Victoria in
their call for systematic collection of data at either a state
or national level that accurately captures the prevalence of
violence experienced by women with a disability
A Place To Call Home
According to the Australian Institute of Health and
Welfare, 1 in 5 Australian women seeking supported
accommodation does so in response to violence in their
own home. A Place To Call Home (APTCH) is a housing
program funded by the federal government that assists
women and their children who are homeless, or at risk
of homelessness, due to family violence. The unique
aspect of this program is that it specifically responds to
the instability caused by lack of affordable safe housing
by providing transitional housing with the potential to
become a long-term, stable home.
Objective
Provide secure, long-term housing and case management
support to remove the need for families who have
experienced the trauma of family violence to move more
times than is necessary, disrupting new-found stability and
support networks
Strategies
1. Allocate APTCH properties to families that Womens
Health West has placed in transitional housing
2. Provide intensive case management and develop case
plans
3. Coordinate client support packages and brokerage to
assist families in APTCH properties including flexible
funds special brokerage for agencies to assist
families in these properties
Outcomes
1. Allocated 4 new APTCH properties to families and
continued to support 4 families waiting in transitional
housing for their homes to become APTCH properties
2. Provided all 8 families with intensive case management
support that involved identifying the types of support
needed to sustain tenancy, attend to childrens needs
and establish or maintain community connections
3. Provided 6 client support packages and allocated
flexible funds to a further two families. Over half
of APTCH clients identify as coming from a CALD
background
Future directions
Continue to strongly recommend the Department of Human
Services increase the number of APTCH housing properties
and financial packages to meet the growing demand from
women and children who are homeless as a result of family
violence
We are extremely happy with the property
and location and have settled well in our
new community. I have made new friends
and so have my children.
- Woman assisted through the APTCH program
14
Crisis Accommodation
Service
Family violence is the single greatest contributor to
womens homelessness. Womens Health West provide
short- to medium-term accommodation for women
and their children escaping family violence when it
is not safe for them to remain their own home. The
accommodation services we provide include a refuge,
crisis accommodation properties and outreach services
to other crisis and transitional housing properties.
Objective
Ensure that women and their children are able to escape
family violence by providing crisis accommodation and
specialised case management support
Strategies
1. Provide 68 women and their children with crisis
accommodation. Develop individualised case plans with
each woman responding to her housing, immigration,
legal, referral and culturally specific needs
2. Ensure that the specific needs of children are met
through recreational and developmental activities that
facilitate healing and recovery from violence and abuse
3. Explore the barriers single women face when leaving
our crisis accommodation to move into the private rental
market
Outcomes
1. Provided 55 women and 79 children with crisis shelter
and support, including post refuge case management
support in transitional housing
2. Organised 32 recreational trips for 64 children and their
mothers including a puppetry walk through the pages of
a giant comic book, hands-on experience with reptiles,
an opportunity for children to make and star in their
own movie at ACMI, and visits to Melbourne Aquarium,
Werribee Zoo and Scienceworks
3. Provided accommodation and case management
support to two single women without children for an
average of seven months due to difficulties accessing
the private rental market. Our research showed that in
addition to financial difficulties, other barriers specific
to single women include landlords assumptions that
tenants seeking shared accommodation are less stable,
less responsible, and could create potential problems
with neighbours. Additional barriers shared by single
women and those with children include poor English
language skills 44 per cent of CAS clients did not
speak English as their first language and required
interpreters to communicate
Future directions
Continue to call for an increased supply of
governmentfunded social housing and affordable private
rental accommodation for single women and advocate for
increased housing options for this group
Two explorers spend the day at Werribee Zoo as part of a recreational trip to with mothers
and Womens Health West childrens worker
PHOTO: Mishelle
Private Rental
Brokerage
Women who experience family violence are at significant
risk of becoming homeless for several reasons: lack
of rental history and/or references, repercussions of
debt or property damage caused by the perpetrator,
relocation because of safety concerns, and the costs
associated with setting up a new home. A short period
of subsidised rent reduces the likelihood that women will
find themselves in rent arrears and/or with large debts.
Objective
Prevent women with or without children from becoming
homeless by assisting them to establish and/or maintain
private rental accommodation through access to brokerage
funds in conjunction with case management support
Strategies
Provide case management support and a maximum of $2000
financial assistance to 32 women who meet the criteria for
the program
Outcomes
Provided 32 women with private rental brokerage funds and
case management support, thereby preventing them from
experiencing housing crisis and potential homelessness
Future directions
Continue to promote and use private rental brokerage
in conjunction with case management support as a
successful strategy to divert women and their children from
homelessness
My goal was to move closer to my dad so
I can work and have family around. This is
happening and Im excited to be leaving an
area where there are so many upsetting and
traumatising memories.
- Woman who received private rental brokerage
15
Safe at Home
Research suggests that womens fear for their
safety and/or that of their children leads many into
homelessness. This program supports women and their
children to stay in their home rather than leave after
experiencing family violence.
Objective
Prevent homelessness by providing practical and financial
assistance that responds to the immediate safety needs of
women and children, allowing them to remain in their home
Culturally and linguistically
diverse housing
Womens Health Wests records show that women born
overseas from a non-English speaking background are
over-represented as users of family violence support
services. Census data shows that 37 per cent of female
residents in the west were born overseas, but they
represent 47 per cent of women accessing our outreach
service.
Strategies
Objective
1. Assist a minimum of 30 women and their children to
remain safely in the family home
2. Coordinate a minimum of 30 home safety strategies
including lock changes, door and window repairs, safety
lighting, purchase of landline or mobile telephones with
credit, and personal alarms
3. Assist women to apply for an intervention order
containing a clause that excludes the perpetrator from
the home
4. Provide women and their children with support and
referral to crisis accommodation while they wait for
intervention orders and safety measures to be put in
place
Provide a tailored response to migrant and refugee women
escaping family violence to access transitional, private and
public housing
Outcomes
1. Supported 85 women and 111 children to remain in their
home; 28 more women than the previous year. Demand
exceeded the brokerage limit this financial year. In
some instances where women were financially able, we
requested a co-contribution
2. Spent a total of $13,850 in brokerage funds improving
the safety of these families through 187 security
installations, upgrades and/or repairs including one
mobile telephone. Limited brokerage restricted access
to advanced security measures, such as security
cameras, with women referred to other resources
resulting in delays in accomplishing their safety plan
3. Supported 3 families to access interim crisis
accommodation while they waited for their intervention
orders to be finalised
4. Provided court support to 62 women to obtain
intervention orders; every order included a clause to
exclude the perpetrator from the home
Future directions
Continue to call on government to extend funding beyond
2015
Description of security items provided
No. of items
Repair doors and windows
4
Re-key/replace locks on doors, windows and
76
garage
Diaries to assist women to document
103
incidents as part of safety plan
Purchase of mobile telephones
1
Interim crisis accommodation
3
Total
187
16
Strategies
1. Provide 52 CALD women and their children with
up to two years of case management support
during their transition to safe, secure and affordable
accommodation
2. Provide secondary consultation (externally and
internally) and housing-specific training to those
working with CALD women and children who are
experiencing or have experienced family violence
3. Manage two crisis accommodation properties
Outcomes
1. The CALD case manager assisted 53 women and 97
children from a variety of backgrounds including 16
Vietnamese, 6 Ethiopian and 4 Sudanese-speaking
women
2. Provided secondary consultation to approximately 530
internal and external workers, and delivered 2 housing
options training sessions to 7 new family violence
outreach workers as part of their orientation
3. Maintained Womens Health Wests two crisis
accommodation properties and coordinated transitional
housing management lists across Womens Health
Wests family violence teams
Future directions
Continue to enhance working relationships with housing
officers, local real estate agents and community support
groups/individuals, to ensure easier access to appropriate
rental housing, especially for single women
Thanks Womens Health West. Without your
encouragement and support for my family
violence situation and helping me and my
children to move into a permanent house,
I would not to be able to live in a family
violence free situation.
- Woman assisted through the CALD housing program
Victims Assistance and
Counselling Program
Counselling assists women to recover from the
traumatic effects of family violence. Women who have
experienced family violence and have reported the
crime to police are eligible for five free sessions of
counselling, as well as assessment reports to apply
to the Victims of Crime Assistance Tribunal for further
assistance and funding for additional counselling where
needed.
Objective
Provide counselling to support women to recover from the
impacts of trauma from family violence
Strategies
1. Provide 360 hours of counselling and support to 75
women who are victims of family violence crime
2. Maintain a strong partnership with cohealth and other
key community-based agencies to facilitate clear
referral pathways and a cohesive service system for
women and their children
3. Continue to improve on trauma-informed counselling
interventions through specialist training and regular
access to clinical supervision
Outcomes
1. Provided 439 hours of counselling and support to 50
women. The complexity of some of the cases reduced
our capacity to reach the target as 8 women required
longer-term counselling. Evaluation showed that
womens post-trauma symptoms decreased while their
self esteem and confidence in themselves increased
2. Maintained a strong partnership with cohealth
and positive working relationships with key
communitybased agencies. Womens and childrens
safety was improved through supported planning and
decision making, including increased reporting to
police and assistance to access a range of services
appropriate to their own or their childrens needs
3. Counselling interventions were enhanced through
specialist training and monthly clinical supervision
Future directions
Case Study
Sarahs husband abused her emotionally and
psychologically throughout their ten-year
marriage and threatened to kill her if she tried
to leave.
I was a terrified, emotional,
nervous wreck coming to terms with
a long history of abuse...
When he seriously assaulted Sarah, Victoria
Police applied for an intervention order on
her behalf and she was granted a one-year
intervention order.
Womens Health West developed strategies
to keep Sarah and her children safe,
including working with police to implement
the extreme risk client strategy to manage her
risk and ensure their safety.
My case worker went through a
checklist with me to properly identify
the main concerns
Sarahs ex-partners relatives harassed
Sarah at court so we arranged for her to give
evidence via video link and put her in touch
with a community legal centre that organised
a barrister for her.
Sarah was granted
a full three-year
extension of the
intervention order.
I know there
is no way I
could have
done this
alone.
Explore additional funding opportunities to be able to
provide the longer-term counselling needed by women who
are victims of family violence
I dont feel like its my fault anymore,
he is responsible for his violence not me.
- Counselling client
17
Childrens Counselling
In 2013-14 children were present at 2,376 family violence
incidents in the western region. The childrens counselling
program provides child-focused counselling and therapeutic
group work to assist children to make sense of, and recover
from, experiences of family violence.
Womens Health West is the only service in the region able
to provide specialised counselling to children who have
experienced violence. We have the capacity to support
fewer than 10 per cent of those in need.
Objective
Outcomes
Deliver timely counselling services and resources for
children who have experienced family violence and build the
familys capacity to support children in their recovery
1. Provided counselling and support to 205 children in the
western metropolitan area. This included child-focussed
single session counselling with 14 clients, supporting
mothers to build their capacity to identify and respond
to their childs trauma. Single sessions were provided
when families werent able to attend ongoing childrens
counselling sessions
2. Provided a regionally-accessible outpost service to 56
children in Hoppers Crossing and 52 children in Melton
while continuing to build on our relationships with
partner agencies
3. Partnered with Merri Outreach Support Service,
Djerriwarrh Community Health, Anglicare and LaTrobe
University to deliver two SPLASh (Safe Place for
Laugher, Arts and Sharing) groups for a total of 16
primary school-aged children. These groups were held
in Wyndham and Melton
4. Secured funding for a family violence pre-school-aged
group. We partnered with an occupational therapist
and ISIS Primary Care to run a SPLASh group for
preschoolers and their mothers in Hobsons Bay. This
little SPLASh group focussed on involving mothers in
play to facilitate the normal development and learning
of their children, in addition to using sensory activities to
help manage emotions. Little SPLASh was attended by
8 children and their mothers
5. Re-modelled and refurbished a larger childrens art
therapy room, which has enabled an expansion of
counselling to include siblings and families
Strategies
1. Provide counselling using creative arts and play therapy
to 146 children
2. Provide out-post counselling services at ISIS Primary
Care in Wyndham and at Djerriwarrh Health Service in
Melton
3. Facilitate two therapeutic childrens creative arts groups
for 16 primary school-aged children in collaboration
with other agencies
4. Apply for an additional $5000 in funding through the
Western Region Integrated Family Violence Committee
to run an additional therapeutic creative arts group
for pre-school children and their mothers who have
experienced family violence
5. Secure a larger childrens counselling room to
accommodate siblings when providing arts and play
family therapy
Coming to group has made me realise that
other people have had the same experiences.
12-year-old SPLASh group participant
Future directions
Since attending group, my son seems to
have a better understanding of his emotions
and frequently says, I feel when talking
about his experiences.
Mother of a SPLASh group participant
Continue to expand therapies focussing on relational
trauma, increasing sibling and mother-child dyad
counselling. Further integrate knowledge to support
mothers with parenting after the impacts of family
violence
Continue to provide government with information
about the disproportionately low funding for childrens
counselling compared with demand
Taming the beast during childrens play therapy
PHOTO: Stephanie
18
Family Violence Regional Integration Coordination
The role of regional integration coordination is one of strategic leadership in steering integration initiatives
and activities that support the achievement of the Western Integration Family Violence Committee (WIFVC)
priorities as set out in the action plan.
Members of the Critical Reference
Group with a copy of the High Risk
Client Strategy Pilot Evaluation
(L-R): Nick Valentine (Lifeworks), Maureen
Smith (Regional Integration Coordinator),
Scott Hall (Relationships Australia Victoria),
Joan Eddy (Djerriwarrh Health Services),
Detective Inspector Kerryn Hynam (Victoria
Police), Assistant Commissioner Andrew
Crisp (Victoria Police), Dr Robyn Gregory
(Womens Health West), Sergeant Kevin
Godfrey (Victoria Police)
PHOTO: Emma Breheny
Objective
Improve cross-system coordination by continuing to
facilitate the development of partnerships crucial to
successful implementation of the WIFVC action plan
Strategies
1. Deliver Identifying Family Violence training to
allied health, helpline workers, CALD and other
professionals whose work is not traditionally
considered part of the response to family violence
2. Partner with the Wyndham Family Violence
Committee and the Wyndham Working With
Young People Network to develop responses to
adolescents as perpetrators and victims of family
violence
3. Support the high risk client strategy critical
reference group to launch the evaluation
report and facilitate the implementation of the
recommendations
4. Review the WIFVC functions using a partnership
analysis tool
Outcomes
1. Delivered Identifying Family Violence training to
180 professionals working in aged care, migrant
and settlement, youth and young people, mental
health, oral health, health promotion, local laws,
nursing, medical and paramedic care. This was
possible thanks to additional funding from the
Office of Womens Affairs. We also presented to
900 delegates at the Maternal and Child Health
Conference. Evaluation showed an interest in further
training, which we reported to government
2. Partnership work led to the Adolescent Violence
Forum in September 2013 at Wyndham City
Council for 60 participants and featured a keynote
presentation on the psychology of adolescent
violence by Dr Tiffany Lewis from Victoria Police.
The forum identified actions services are taking
to tackle the problem of adolescent violence in
the home given the lack of specialist response. It
also highlighted the need for future professional
development in this area
3. Assistant Commissioner Andrew Crisp launched
the High Risk Client Strategy Pilot 20082010:
Evaluation Report in
November 2013 with 60
guests including
Magistrate Noreen Toohey,
senior police, senior
Department of Human
Services staff and critical
members of the family
violence service system
in Melbournes west.
The Critical Reference
Group who oversaw the
evaluation and organised
the launch continue to
meet bimonthly to monitor
the implementation of the
recommendations. Met with
Community Services Minister
Mary Wooldridges office and Cesar Melhem and
Colleen Hartland (both Members for the Western
Metropolitan Region in the Legislative Council), to
discuss the findings of the evaluation report with
respect to Victorias system responses to family
violence. The profile of the strategy has grown since
the launch, with external agencies seeking advice
on how to replicate the success of the strategy. The
document is the fourth most popular page on the
WIFVC website
4. The review of WIFVC functions identified the
strength of the governance group being the
multi-sector participation of appropriate seniorlevel
members required to advance cross systems
integration. The review also identified gaps in
representation and suggested a plan to rectify the
problem
Future directions
Develop a new Western Integrated Family Violence
action plan as the current plan expires in 2014
Assess governance structure following cross-sector
service reforms
Participate in the No More Deaths campaign in the
lead up to the Victorian election
Progress partnerships within CALD communities
19
Sunrise womens group participants at Altona pier, 2014
PHOTO: Scout Kozakiewicz
health promotion
Womens Health West has continued
to work with our partners and
community over the past twelve
months to advance equity and
justice for women in the west
across our health promotion priority
areas, including mental health and
wellbeing and social connectedness,
sexual and reproductive health,
and prevention of violence against
women.
20
These priorities reflect new guidelines
for the Victorian Womens Health
Program developed by the Department
of Health in collaboration with womens
health services in 2013. The guidelines
articulate the strategic directions of
the program in separating it from the
broader and more generic health
promotion funding stream.
The new financial year saw a new
approach to the management of health
promotion in the form of a job share
between Helen and Annarella who,
by good fortune, had been peers and
colleagues in other organisations.
They bring many combined years of
experience as feminist social workers
in womens health, and in managing
teams and delivery of direct services,
research, education, prevention,
organisational development, policy and
advocacy.
This year we experienced considerable
staff turnover, bidding farewell to
some valued and experienced staff
and welcoming a number of skilled,
enthusiastic and wonderful new
members to the team.
Womens Health West negotiated
with our landlord to move from the
building next door to the larger
upstairs space in 2013 and the health
promotion team relocated to that area,
bringing them closer to other teams
in the organisation. Nevertheless, we
recognise the ongoing importance of
maintaining connections between each
of the teams.
Delivering and advocating for
accessible and culturally appropriate
services and resources for women
and their children
Putting womens health, safety and
wellbeing on the political agenda to
improve the status of women
Following our consultations with women
from specific cultural communities,
we provided opportunities for women
to develop new confidence, and
knowledge about human rights and
the potential for financial and social
independence through programs such
as Financial Literacy, Lead On Again
and Our Community, Our Rights. The
work is designed to promote and
enhance womens confidence and
ability to become leaders in their own
communities, thus reaching many more
women in the future, alongside the
development of written and electronic
resources to support them. This year,
that included a series of short films
about what some women had gained
from their experience in the groups.
Womens Health West provided a range
of responses to state and national
inquiries and law reform efforts this
year. Our input covered pregnancy
and workplace discrimination;
violence against women; gay, lesbian,
bisexual, transgender and intersex
health and wellbeing; social inclusion
for people with a disability; disability
discrimination; racial discrimination;
and human trafficking, forced marriage,
forced labour and other slavery-like
practices. We also provided feedback
and recommendations to regional
municipal councils regarding priorities
for their budget decisions in reference
to womens health, including to
Brimbank, Hobsons Bay, Maribyrnong,
Melbourne, Melton, Moonee Valley and
Wyndham.
Improving the conditions in which
women live, work and play in the
western region of Melbourne
Recognising that good health,
safety and wellbeing begins in our
workplace
Womens Health West has been
actively involved in a number of
regional municipal safety committees
and forums, including the Moonee
Valley Community Safety Stakeholder
Group, the Melbourne Safe Community
Committee, the Brimbank City Council
Safety Roundtable Committee and
the Wyndham Community Safety
Roundtable. Each group engaged
significantly with a range of strategies
aimed at primary prevention of violence
against women as well as planning
and implementing responsive and
reactive strategies such as lighting,
policing, and encouraging social
inclusion particularly for women
and marginalised communities.
This commitment was evident by
their involvement in Womens Health
Wests Preventing Violence Together
partnership and their acknowledgement
of the achievements and ongoing
influence of Womens Health Wests
leadership in the area.
This year Womens Health
West continued to review our
capacitybuilding processes, such
as developing meaningful and
functional professional development
strategies and using team meetings
constructively. We developed a draft
client and community participation
strategy following community and staff
consultations, with outcomes focussed
on providing meaningful avenues for
engagement with Womens Health West.
We continue to develop the concepts
and future strategies arising from the
feminist audit.
Our groups such as Sunrise and Power
On have continued to offer women
meaningful and ongoing opportunities
to connect with their community,
develop confidence and skills, and form
friendships and networks.
Working with others to achieve our
goals
The current lack of a statewide strategic
response to sexual and reproductive
health services across the regions
prompted Womens Health West to
harness the relationships developed
through the western region sexual
and reproductive health promotion
partnership to build on progress that
has been gaining momentum across
Victoria. For example, we initiated a
regional partnership infrastructure
that includes a reference group and
working groups to implement the
various aspects of the Action for Equity
plan. This brings together a group
of committed supporters of womens
access to fertility control and options,
while continuing to inform and promote
at a state and national level the
critical need for a comprehensive and
coordinated response by government.
Another example is our plan to build the
capacity of regional health providers to
offer the relatively new health service
of medication termination of pregnancy
as an affordable and accessible option
for women dealing with unplanned
pregnancy here in the western region.
This is via a model that provides training
and formation of networks for potential
providers.
Womens Health West has continued our
active involvement with regional primary
care partnerships (PCPs). For instance,
the Inner North West PCP facilitated
members attendance at training aimed
at developing common indicators to
evaluate the impact of health promotion
and prevention activities by our regional
primary care providers.
Future directions
Womens Health West continues
our commitment to evaluation and
monitoring to report to funding bodies
with rigour and evidence. This year
we adopted new ways of measuring
key indicators such as social network
analysis of partnership effectiveness
and understanding concepts of cost
effectiveness in health promotion, and
will consider how to embed these into
future projects.
One of the unique qualities of Womens
Health West is in the complementary
combination of our family violence
direct service staffs expertise with
the health promotion aspect of
primary prevention of violence against
women. We will continue to value
and promote that strength into the
future, with collaborative plans for a
wholeof-organisation submission to the
upcoming senate inquiry into domestic
violence in Australia.
Our integrated health promotion plan
outlines upcoming aims, such as
continuing our client and community
participation strategy, tackling
racebased discrimination through
anti-racism awareness and employment
of Muslim women, and undertaking a
gendered analysis of chronic diseases,
such as diabetes, to inform prevention.
21
Prevention of violence against women
Preventing Violence Together
Western Region Action Plan to Prevent Violence Against Women
During this financial year, 29 Victorian women were killed by their intimate partner. Research shows the major cause of
violence against women is inequity between women and men. This regional partnership brings together local councils
and community health and other services committed to the prevention of violence against women before it occurs.
Objective
Lead the implementation of a regional action plan to prevent
violence against women
Strategies
1. Strengthen partnerships through the Preventing Violence
Together (PVT) Implementation Committee
2. Support partner agencies to make prevention of violence
against women a priority in organisational health
promotion plans, municipal public health plans and
other related strategic plans
3. Build the capacity of partner agencies to promote
gender equity and respectful relationships through
research, development and implementation of training
and resources
4. Engage with regional Indigenous networks and services
around family violence prevention within Indigenous
communities
Outcomes
1. Continued to convene bimonthly implementation
committee meetings. Developed an orientation package
for new members including individual introduction
meetings. The partnership expanded this year with
the addition of Western Region Centre Against Sexual
Assault and cohealth. Partners and the broader
community called on Womens Health West to support
gender equity initiatives, e.g. our CEO presented the
business case for gender equity at a forum by Brimbank
Council and local business
2. All partners officially endorsed the PVT action plan
and identified prevention of violence against women
22
and gender equity as important priorities in their health
promotion or municipal public health and wellbeing
plans (where applicable). Additionally 7 partners
have developed organisation-wide gender equity and
prevention of violence against women policies
3. Developed two training modules and delivered 13
training sessions and presentations to build capacity
of partners and support their efforts to communicate
primary prevention messages and implement strategies.
Maintained an online resource hub that received 860
visits. Nine of 11 partners participated in a staff attitudes
survey implemented by the Australian Research Centre
in Sex, Health and Society. Partners received a summary
of their results along with regional results against which
to measure progress when we repeat the survey in 2015
4. Held consultations with Aboriginal elders from the
western region and members of the West Metropolitan
Indigenous Family Violence Regional Action Group
Future directions
Continue to support the partnership to implement primary
prevention strategies to end violence against women:
Convene a forum for PVT executive leaders titled
Leading in Gender Equity
Design and implement activities and processes with
members that resource and engage their leadership on
relevant issues
Develop and deliver Prevention of Violence Against
Women and its Determinants training to build members
capacity
Conduct ongoing evaluation to ensure the project
evolves and adapts according to partners needs
Prevention of violence against women
A mid-term evaluation found some changes in
attitude towards gender equality, bullying and
respectful relationships. For example:
Boys and girls are equal,
they can both do sports
and tidy up house.
You, Me and Us
Respectful relationships through peer education
Respectful relationship education is an internationally recognised tool that contributes to preventing violence against
women. You, Me and Us uses a peer education model to deliver respectful relationship education to young people
aged 10 to 13 and 18 to 24 in primary schools, universities, youth organisations and sporting groups.
Objective
Outcomes
Work with young people to raise their awareness of respectful
and disrespectful relationships and develop their skills to
negotiate respectful relationships. Promote young women
as leaders in their community by supporting them as peer
educators
1. Trained 14 young women as peer educators, who then
co-delivered 123 You, Me and Us sessions with the
project worker
2. Delivered 123 education sessions to 2,721 young people
in primary schools, youth organisations, universities and
sporting clubs. Sessions were evaluated throughout the
program and an evaluation is currently being undertaken
to measure attitude change among young people. A
full evaluation report will be delivered at the end of
November 2014
3. Delivered three professional development sessions to 27
teachers, school nurses/counsellors, youth workers and
sporting club professionals
Strategies
1. Train 15 young CALD women aged between 18 and 24
to be peer educators. The intensive two-day training
will ensure they have a good understanding of violence
against women and prevention strategies, as well as
increased facilitation skills. Increase young womens
leadership skills to be ambassadors within their
community
2. Deliver 110 respectful relationship education sessions to
2,650 young people. Every session will be co-delivered
by a peer educator for a maximum of two hours and will
be delivered in primary schools, youth organisations,
universities and sporting clubs
3. Deliver three one-day professional development sessions
to teachers, school nurses/counsellors, youth workers
and sporting club professionals to provide them with
a deeper understanding of how the project works as a
primary prevention tool, and to equip them with skills
to further discuss respectful relationships with young
people
Future directions
Completed session delivery in June 2014 and currently
collating evaluation results and developing a program
manual. The project ends in November 2014
23
Mental health and wellbeing
Our Community, Our Rights
I have always wanted to be a part of change that
positively affects the lives of vulnerable women
and children. This project has given me the
opportunity of time, resources and fellowship of
likeminded women to make it a reality.
Newly-arrived women from refugee backgrounds are less
likely to advocate for themselves and to invoke human
rights protections, despite experiencing serious human
rights violations in Australia, their home country or en
route to Australia. This program supports women to
engage in actions that promote and protect their own and
their communities human rights.
OCOR participant
Objective
Outcomes
Increase the capacity of 10 to 14 refugee or migrant women
to invoke human rights, participate in civil society and
facilitate change
Iteration two
1. Provided intensive support to participants from Burma to
plan and implement three projects:
(a) Karen cultural awareness training for service
providers attended by 111 representatives from
community organisations, emergency services,
schools and local government
(b) Consumer rights training with 90 vulnerable
Karen community members and a letter from Karen
community members to 31 companies seeking a
commitment to end to door-to-door sales, which
resulted in associated media appearances
(c) Full-day gender equity training for ten Zomi,
Kachin and Karenni women
Strategies
Iteration two
1. Support 11 participants from Burma to implement their
own human rights-based projects
Iteration three
1. Consult with Indian women to identify the skills needed
to take action on human rights
2. Deliver and evaluate workshops that build participants
understanding of civic participation
3. Support participants to implement their own human
rights-based projects
4. Maintain an expert advisory group to advise the project
team
Film and fact sheets
1. Develop three short films to inspire others to undertake
human rights work
2. Develop a series of fact sheets for services and
community members about this work
Iteration three
1. Consulted with 8 Indian community leaders, 25 Indian
women and 6 service providers about their human rights
capacity-building needs
2. Delivered and evaluated 6 human rights workshops with
14 Indian participants. Participants reported significant
increases in knowledge, skills and confidence, which
enabled many to take action. Since the program ended,
ten participants met to start working on new projects
including a social enterprise designed to generate
income and redress womens isolation
3. Supported 12 participants to plan projects concerning
their communities:
(a) A brochure for Indian women applying for
intervention orders to support them to understand
their rights and access culturally specific support
(b) A resource for police and service providers about
Indian culture and migration to enable culturally
sensitive service provision
(c) A short film about the challenges facing
international students with links to available support
4. Met regularly with the expert advisory group for high
level direction and advice
Film and fact sheets
1. Filmed participants from South Sudan, Burma and India
in preparation for production of short films
2. Developed six fact sheets for service providers and
three fact sheets for community members
Future directions
Our Community, Our Rights participant 2014
PHOTO: Scout Kozakiewicz
24
Secure funding to deliver the program with international
students in 2015
Finalise production of short films and series of fact
sheets
Lead On Again
I personally think that it is a great training for
us young people who are newly-immigrated
to learn about the countrys history and
our rights, meet others from different
backgrounds, build up our skills to be a great
leader and develop our confidence.
Young womens participation in leadership and
community roles has a positive impact on their health
and wellbeing, and enhances womens control over the
decisions affecting their lives. Lead On Again provides a
space for young women from culturally and linguistically
diverse backgrounds to feel safe and connected,
recognise their strengths, develop new skills and become
active participants in the community.
2014 participant
Objective
Outcomes
Increase the leadership skills, knowledge, capacity
and participation of 1015 young women from CALD
backgrounds through strengths-based training and support
1. Delivered five days of workshops with 14 young women
from China, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Burma (Chin State
and Karen State), Sierra Leone, Sudan, Somalia and
Vietnam. Eleven participants said the sessions on public
speaking, womens health, conflict resolution, body
image and event planning had direct practical relevance
to their lives
2. Supported young women to plan and host a celebration
lunch with other participants, with 13 young women
reporting marked increases in confidence, inclusiveness
and skills including public speaking, teamwork and
communication
3. Supported 10 participants to take up leadership
opportunities including with WYPIN, as peer educators
with Womens Health Wests You, Me and Us respectful
relationships program, and in youth journalism
4. Identified, trained and mentored one past participant to
be a peer educator
Strategies
1. Deliver five days of workshops in January 2014
in partnership with the Western Young Peoples
Independent Network (WYPIN)
2. Following the workshops, support participants to design
and implement their own event to enable implementation
of new skills
3. Support young women to participate in ongoing
leadership and community activities
4. Create leadership opportunities for former participants
by mentoring one former participant to be a peer
educator in the 2014 program
Future directions
Lead On Again participants 2014
PHOTO: Scout Kozakiewicz
Run the program in partnership with WYPIN in 2015
Expand the target group to include some participants
from Australian-born backgrounds to increase
intercultural learning and acceptance in the program
25
Mental health and wellbeing
Now I have people who care
who encourage me out of my isolation
who raise my self-esteem and
accept me just as I am.
- Sunrise member
Sunrise Womens Groups
Power On
Women with a disability experience a range of barriers to
social inclusion, appropriate housing, financial security
and safety. The consequences can include interrupted
education and employment, and lack of recognition of
their reproductive rights, sexuality and communication
needs. These factors result in poorer health and
wellbeing.
Women experience depression, anxiety and
posttraumatic stress at higher rates than men. Power
On is a peer-facilitated wellbeing program designed for
women experiencing mental illness, and for women in
unpaid caring roles. The Power On model contextualises
mental health recovery and prevention in relation to
gender inequity and engages women to enhance their
wellbeing.
Objective
Objective
Facilitate regular, safe, supportive and women-centred
activities as an opportunity for group members to build their
self-esteem, broaden their social networks and eventually
take individual and collective actions to improve their health
and wellbeing
Develop a sustainable model to support organisations
delivering Power On that ensures the program continues
beyond 2014
Strategies
1. Increase the number of trained facilitators in the
metropolitan region and introduce training to new mental
health services
2. Support mental health services to facilitate Power On
workshops in 2014
3. Explore partnerships with non-mental health services
1. Increase womens access to the program via outreach to
isolated women who have a disability
2. Maintain a calendar of activities that is guided by
members
3. Provide information and support that builds on womens
existing skills and resources
Strategies
Outcomes
Outcomes
1. Sunrise attracted 18 new participants this financial year
2. Conducted workshops with women to develop a
calendar of activities that is relevant and engaging to
them. Women reported feeling more socially connected,
receiving emotional and practical support from each
other, that they appreciate getting out in the community
and taking action to improve their wellbeing, having
gained confidence, motivation and a positive sense of
identity
3. Sunrise members contributed to the Victorian
Governments Inquiry into Social Inclusion for People
with a Disability, local government consultations, and
the Voices Against Violence report by Women with
Disabilities Victoria
1. Introduced Power On to two new services this year; as
a result, we delivered facilitator training with 8 staff in
those services and an existing service
2. Supported cohealth to deliver two workshops with 17
women in the first half of 2014. Women who participated
reported significant outcomes in their mental health and
wellbeing
3. Attempted to engage a statewide service by providing
facilitator training and establishing agreements.
Ultimately the service was unable to commit the
resources required for this work
Future directions
Engage with those services that have been recommissioned
to provide mental health services in the west to explore
ongoing opportunities to deliver Power On
Future directions
Establish a new group in Sunshine in response to
demand
Conduct a formal evaluation of the program
Sunrise participants 2014
PHOTO: Scout Kozakiewicz
26
Power On has given me a sense of direction,
strength and happiness ... Im very lucky to
have this opportunity and I hope other women
have this opportunity because its made a big
difference to me.
Power On participant
Financial Literacy
Women from newly-arrived communities face language
and cultural barriers to effectively engaging with
Australian financial systems, which can compound their
economic disadvantage. Many grew up in countries
or refugee camps with cash-based economies and
had limited access to education. Understanding and
effectively engaging with complex financial systems in
Australia is a major settlement challenge.
Client and Community
Participation Strategy
The need to support active and meaningful client and
community participation is well recognised across
political, health and social service sectors. Womens
Health West recognises that women are experts in their
own lives and that realisation of full social, political and
economic participation is integral to gender equity.
Objective
Increase the capacity of women from newly-arrived
communities in the western region to negotiate financial
systems, take control of financial decision making and
access economic resources
Strategies
1. Deliver two six-week financial literacy programs
to women from the Oromo and Chin communities,
and ensure that program content is specific to each
communitys needs and context
2. Improve links between newly-arrived women and finance
and housing agencies, and improve local services
understanding of newly-arrived communities in the
western region by collaborating with relevant agency
staff in program delivery
Outcomes
1. Delivered the remaining five financial literacy sessions
with an average of 19 Oromo women in partnership with
the Kayyo Oromo Womens Group in the Flemington
Estate; the first session occurred in the previous
reporting period. Participants reported increased
confidence to navigate financial systems, decreased
levels of fear and stress when dealing with services, and
improved understanding of their rights. In partnership
with Spectrum Migrant Resource Centre, Womens Health
West consulted with the Chin community and relevant
service providers, and delivered five sessions with
Lautu and Hakha Chin women in Sunshine. The women
preferred fewer and longer sessions, so we delivered
5 sessions of 5 hours each, instead of 6 sessions of 3
hours. Participants reported improved confidence to
understand the financial landscape, access services and
assert their rights
2. Approximately five Oromo women made appointments
with Centrelink, community legal services and financial
counsellors for ongoing support because of relationships
formed during the program. More than half of the
participants from the Chin community also accessed
ongoing support from Spectrum and other service
providers through the links developed
Future directions
Design and deliver the program with Eritrean women in
partnership with Spectrum Migrant Resource Centre
Source funding to deliver the program with other
newlyarrived communities
Objective
Develop viable women-centred strategies to increase the
opportunity for clients and communities to provide feedback
about our programs and services; actively shape future
projects, programs and priorities; participate in actions
designed to improve justice and equity for women in the
west; and/or engage in other opportunities that arise as a
result of the strategy
Strategies
1. Consult with community women to ensure their views on
meaningful participation are included
2. Engage staff in all stages of the process to drive client
and community participation from a feminist perspective
3. Develop and implement practical strategies to enhance
client and community participation at Womens Health
West
Outcomes
1. Engaged over 50 women and several men from priority
population groups in community consultations. Promoted
the consultation process on social media and received 9
responses to our online survey
2. Representatives from across Womens Health West
attended bimonthly working group meetings. The
group conducted two workshops to generate and
prioritise strategies to increase client and community
participation, with 23 staff attending the first workshop
and 16 attending the second
3. Developed a four-year whole-of-organisation client and
community participation strategy that has achievable
actions, identified outcomes and is clearly aligned with
community and staff feedback. Sent follow-up letters to
community groups and individuals who participated in
consultations, providing an overview of themes raised
Future directions
Explore opportunities for funding to support client and
community participation
Strengthen relationships with community groups in
Melbournes west
Support Womens Health West staff to embed client and
community participation strategies in their work
If we have got problems with the bank
or housing or whatever, we know
where to go to seek solutions.
I feel connected when I feel heard and
respected... there is nothing worse than
when I feel exploited for my time or as if
I am being used as a tokenistic gesture.
- Oromo participant
- Young woman, 2014 community consultations
27
Sexual and reproductive health promotion
Action for Equity
According to Victorias health and wellbeing plan,
Melbournes western region has higher morbidity rates
in relation to sexual and reproductive ill health than the
Victorian average. Research shows that sexual and
reproductive ill health can be prevented. Action for Equity
is a regional sexual and reproductive health promotion
plan informed by a primary prevention approach.
Objective
Lead a regional partnership to implement long-term
strategies across a range of settings and sectors that will
generate and maintain the social and cultural change
needed to achieve optimal sexual and reproductive health
Strategies
1. Launch Action for Equity and secure commitment from
partner agencies to implement the 35 strategies that
comprise the plan
2. Maintain a formal governance structure that includes a
senior management committee and a practice forum of
staff with representation from 17 partner organisations
from the community and health sectors, councils and
statewide organisations
3. Evaluate implementation using the rigorous evaluation
strategy outlined in the plan itself
The Helen McPherson Smith Trust invited
Action for Equity to submit an expression
of interest for a selective grant process.
Outcomes
1. Georgie Crozier, Parliamentary Secretary for Health,
launched the plan in October 2013. Partners have
committed to actions that advance 30 of the 35
strategies. Additionally, many strategies have more than
one partner working on them. Work has commenced in
relation to condom vending machines, medical abortion,
sexual rights and gender diversity, women in and exiting
prison, as well as Aboriginal youth in Melbournes west
2. Held 4 partnership practice forums and 3 regional
reference (senior management) committee meetings
3. Commenced a social network analysis evaluation,
surveying partners over three periods to analyse the
changing partnerships (relationships, influences,
impact) within Action for Equity
A $200,000 grant would ensure resourcing
for Action for Equitys work with particular
population groups such as Aboriginal
youth in Melbournes west and prison
populations, and work in contraception
and STIs such as installing condom
vending machines.
Action for Equity partners
Future directions
Seek to engage partners to consolidate their work
commitments over years two and three, and provide
sexual and reproductive health promotion training to
assist partners to undertake that work
Working groups will target work with specific population
groups and/or health promotion actions, sharing the
knowledge with different partners working on the same
objective
Brimbank City Council; Centre for Culture, Ethnicity
and Health; cohealth; Department of Education
and Early Childhood Development; HealthWest
Partnership; Hepatitis Victoria; Hobsons Bay City
Council; Inner North West Melbourne Medicare
Local; ISIS Primary Care; Maribyrnong City
Council; Macedon Ranges and North Western
Melbourne Medicare Local; Melton City Council;
Melbourne City Council; Moonee Valley City
Council; South Western Melbourne Medicare
Local; Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled
Health Organisation; Womens Health West;
Wyndham City Council
Intesar Homed and Elly Taylor with the Action for Equity plan in Maribyrnong and
Hobsons Bay Weekly
28
Sexual and reproductive health promotion
Family and Reproductive Rights Education Project
Female genital mutilation or cutting (FGM/C) is a cultural practice that violates women and girls human rights.
Melbournes west is home to increasing numbers of women from countries that practice FGM/C. Community education
is a health promotion strategy that works to meet the health and wellbeing needs of women who have migrated from
these countries.
Community Education
Professional Development
Objective
Objective
Provide health and wellbeing education sessions to women
in the African community. Sessions aim to eliminate this
practice and improve access to culturally appropriate
services
To build the capacity of healthcare professionals to respond
appropriately to women affected by FGM/C and understand
the social, cultural and clinical needs of women who have
undergone the practice
Strategies
Strategies
1. Collaborate with settlement services and womens
community groups to develop and deliver a minimum
of 8 community health education sessions for women
affected by FGM/C from different African communities in
the region
2. Undertake a series of community consultations in
Melbournes western suburbs. Design consultations to
explore young womens, mothers and community and
religious leaders perspectives about the sexual and
reproductive health of young African women
3. Collaborate with PapScreen Victoria to design a cervical
cancer prevention community education program for
African women who have undergone FGM/C
1. Deliver 4 professional development training sessions to
nurses and medical staff at Sunshine Hospital
2. Deliver professional development to 20 maternal and
child health nurses from Melbournes west
3. Deliver one professional development session to refugee
health nurses in the west and one to nurse cervical
screening providers from Melbournes north west
4. Undertake a one-year evaluation to assess knowledge,
practice and longer-term change at Sunshine Hospital
Outcomes
1. In collaboration with settlement services, Womens
Health West delivered 8 community education sessions
with 36 women from FGM/C practicing communities on
topics including Pap tests, HPV vaccine, and vitamin
D deficiency. These sessions gave women confidence
to talk to workers about FGM/C and its impact on their
health and that of their young girls
2. Conducted community consultations with 15 young
African women, community leaders, academics and
a religious leader to inform the development of a
culturally-appropriate sexual and reproductive health
program for young African women from communities
known to practice FGM/C
3. Produced a Preventing Cervical Cancer resource in
partnership with PapScreen Victoria that was delivered
with 26 African women who have experienced FGM/C
Outcomes
1. Delivered 4 professional development sessions attended
by 54 nurses, doctors and midwives at Sunshine
Hospital. The hospital reported an increase in the
number of women affected by FGM/C presenting at the
African Womens Wellness Clinic to access culturally
appropriate maternity services
2. Delivered a professional development session to 13
maternal and child health nurses
3. In collaboration with PapScreen Victoria, Womens
Health West delivered professional development training
to 15 nurse cervical screening providers and one
session to 25 statewide refugee health nurses
4. Evaluation outcomes showed an increase in knowledge
among health professionals regarding the social,
cultural and clinical needs of women affected by FGM/C
and findings were integrated into the professional
development program and other strategies at the
hospital
Future directions
Future directions
Deliver a sexual and reproductive health education program
specifically for young African women in Melbournes west
who have experienced FGM/C
Strengthen the ongoing partnership with Sunshine
Hospital
Collaborate with the Mercy Hospital and other
hospitals in the west to deliver a FARREP professional
development program to build the capacity of
professionals to respond to the social, cultural and
clinical aspects of FGM/C
29
Sexual and reproductive health promotion
Western English
Language School Human
Relations Program
Young people from migrant and refugee backgrounds
have limited access to sexuality and relationship
education compared with their peers in mainstream
education.
Objective
Prepare young people from migrant and refugee
backgrounds for their entry into mainstream schooling in
Australia by increasing their knowledge and skills relating to
sexuality and relationships
Girls Talk Guys Talk
Research shows that an effective way to improve
the long-term sexual and reproductive health of the
community is to ensure that young people have sufficient
sexuality education that supports their ability to make
healthy decisions about their relationships and sexual
practices. Girls Talk Guys Talk uses a whole-of-school,
participatory approach to create supportive school
environments that promote healthier relationships and
sexual choices.
Objective
Build the capacity of health professionals to implement Girls
Talk Guys Talk in the region
Strategies
Strategies
1. Deliver a five-week program through translators twice
a year with 14-year-old students attending the Western
English Language School (WELS) where this is not part
of the core curriculum
2. Tailor the program to female and male student needs
3. Provide sexuality education to recently arrived migrant
and refugee students who may not have had access to
this information in their country of origin
1. Support cohealth to implement Girls Talk Guys Talk in
the Jackson School, a specialist school for students with
mild intellectual disabilities
2. Establish a community of practice that will meet
bimonthly to provide opportunities for networking and
professional development for health professionals in
community organisations and schools
3. Establish an online resource hub to assist health
professionals in community organisations and schools to
implement the program in their schools
Outcomes
Outcomes
1. Provided five 100-minute sessions in November 2013
and February 2014 covering puberty and reproduction,
pathways and prevention of teenage pregnancy,
safe sexual practices and sexual decision making,
conducting healthy and respectful relationships, respect
and diversity
2. Male staff from Maribyrnong City Councils Phoenix
Youth Centre facilitated the male student program, while
Womens Health West health promotion workers and
a womens health nurse from cohealth facilitated the
female student program. Students participated with the
aid of interpreters or multicultural education aides from
their various language groups
3. At the beginning of each week, students completed a
quiz relating to the previous weeks content. In addition,
a short evaluation was undertaken with students in class
after each program. Students identified sex, consent,
laws, menstruation, contraception, safe relationships and
puberty as areas where they learned new information
relevant to their lives
1. Developed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)
between Womens Health West, the Jackson School and
cohealth. The MoU outlined a commitment to carry out
the Girls Talk Guys Talk program in the next reporting
period and the preparatory phase of the program has
commenced
2. Established a community of practice with 26 members
and initiated an ongoing seminar series. The first
featured a research presentation on the national survey
of Australian secondary school students and sexual
health, and the Ask Grandad program. The second was
a two-day train-the-trainer program enabling community
of practice members to implement Girls Talk Guys Talk
in schools
3. Established an online resource hub and populated it with
relevant policy, curriculum and program resources
Future directions
The future of the WELS program is subject to funding. The
RE Ross Trust grant that funded interpreters over 201214 is
unavailable in 2015. WELS indicated in February 2014 that
its teaching staff, in conjunction with multicultural education
aides funded by WELS, might need training in delivering the
program to ensure its long-term viability.
Future directions
Adapt Girls Talk Guys Talk for use in primary schools
following a similar method of long-term, participatory
intervention
Expand and promote the resource hub to assist schools
and organisations to implement Girls Talk Guys
Talk, thereby furthering the reach of the program and
ensuring that more young people have access to
information and confidence to support healthy decisions
about their relationships and sexual practices
One female participant asked facilitators if she could bring her mother for
sexual and reproductive health information, specific to the Australian context.
The student and her mother were referred to the cohealth womens health nurse.
30
Sexual and reproductive health
influencing change
Womens Health West engages in collaborative action designed to change structural
factors that cause and maintain the conditions under which women and their children face
discrimination.
May/June 2014
Annual Council Budget
201415
Womens Health West
provided submissions to
each council in the west,
calling for clearer reporting
on expenditure associated
with council plans and
policies. We provided an
overview of strategies
for genderresponsive
budgeting, and
recommended spending in
several tangible program
areas to support womens
health, wellbeing and
safety.
Brimbank City Council
Womens Health
West commended
councils commitment
of $7.53 million to
community planning and
development, including
strategies to prevent
violence against women.
Hobsons Bay City Council
Womens Health West
commended council in
naming mental health
services for young people
as a strategic priority,
and urged council to also
fund programs that focus
on preventing bullying
and promoting healthy
relationships among
young people as a means
of promoting positive
mental health.
Maribyrnong City Council
Womens Health West
commended councils
ongoing commitment to
promoting gender equity
in the region, including
the specific allocation in
the 2014-15 budget of
$65,000 to strategies to
prevent violence against
women.
Melbourne City Council
Womens Health West
commended councils
commitment to developing
and implementing a
Reconciliation Action Plan
for 201417 as well as a
Multicultural Policy.
Melton City Council
Womens Health West
commended councils
commitment of $2.68
million to community
planning initiatives, and
in particular to specific
initiatives to promote
gender equity and
positive mental health,
and the development of
the Reconciliation Action
Plan 20142018.
Moonee Valley City
Council
Womens Health
West commended
council on including
$20,000 in dedicated
funding to support the
implementation of the
Diversity, Access and
Equity Plan, and on its
commitment to funding
affordable lifelong learning
programs and community
development initiatives
through the Flemington
Community Centre.
Wyndham City Council
Womens Health West
commended councils
strong commitment to
facilitating community
participation through
the allocation of $2.17
million to community
engagement strategies,
including the community
grants program.
April 2014
Response to proposed
changes to the Racial
Discrimination Act 1975
Office of the Attorney
General
Following an open
letter signed by 155
organisations in
December 2013, Womens
Health West again
recommended against
repealing Section 18C of
the Racial Discrimination
Act 1975. Unaltered,
the Act provides a
strong statement from
government that racist
behaviour is unacceptable
in Australian society.
March 2014
Submission to the
Review of the National
Curriculum
Australian Government
Department of Education
Womens Health
West recommended
that respectful
relationships education
be more consistently
incorporated in the
Australian curriculum
with ageappropriate
and relevant sexuality
education that respects
the diversity of human
relationships and includes
HIV/AIDS and STI
prevention information.
Victorian Gay, Lesbian,
Bisexual, Transgender
and Intersex Health and
Wellbeing Plan
Victorian Government
Department of Health
Womens Health West
participated in community
consultations to inform the
development of a health
and wellbeing plan for the
GLBTI community. Our
submission highlighted
the lack of youth- and
GLBTI-friendly specialised
sexual and reproductive
services in Melbournes
west.
February 2014
Victorian Parliamentary
Inquiry into Social
Inclusion for People
with a Disability
Victorian Parliament
Family and Community
Development Committee
Womens Health West
recommended that
intersectional experiences
of gender and disability
be given greater attention
in policy planning and
development, particularly
access to sexual and
reproductive health
services, information and
education, and initiatives
to prevent and respond to
violence against women
with a disability.
Diversity, Access and
Equity Policy
Moonee Valley City
Council
Womens Health West
commended council on its
commitment to improving
social inclusion and
access, through action on
the social determinants of
health. We recommended
that strategies actively
redress negative
stereotyping, violence
and discrimination
and promote positive
representations of diverse
communities.
January 2014
Submission to the
National Review into
Pregnancy and Work
Discrimination
Australian Human Rights
Commission
Womens Health
West recommended
stronger education,
capacitybuilding
initiatives and action to
enforce workplace laws
relating to pregnancy and
parenting discrimination,
including strategies
for negotiating flexible
workplace practices.
Mayoral Charity Fund
grant application
Family Violence Outreach
Services
Womens Health West
applied unsuccessfully
for funding to expand
family violence intake and
crisis response services
available to women living
in Melton to meet the
significant increase in
demand over the past
year.
31
TRAINING
AND DEVELOPMENT
Chin women participating in the 2013 financial literacy program
PHOTO: Shifrah Blustein
December 2013
Reichstein Foundation
grant application
Promoting Economic
Participation and Equity
for Migrant and Refugee
Women
Womens Health West
applied unsuccessfully for
funding to research refugee
and migrant womens
experiences of barriers to
economic participation,
deliver a financial literary
program to women from
newly-arrived communities,
and develop strategies
to inform legislative and
structural change.
Victorian Multicultural
Commission
Strengthening
Multicultural Communities
grant application
Women Understanding
Money in Australia
(Financial Literacy
Program)
Womens Health West
was partly successful in
our funding application to
deliver two financial literacy
programs to support women
from Chin and Eritrean
refugee communities to
increase their capacity
to negotiate Australian
financial systems. The
funding provided will enable
us to run the program with
only one of the proposed
communities; the Eritrean
financial literacy program
will be complete by March
2015.
October 2013
Victorian Womens
Benevolent Trust grant
application
Women Understanding
Money in Australia
(Financial Literacy
Program)
Womens Health West
applied unsuccessfully
for funding to deliver two
financial literacy programs
to support women from
Chin and Eritrean refugee
communities.
September 2013
Community Health,
Wellbeing and Safety
Plan 20132017
Wyndham City Council
Womens Health West
commended council on
the inclusion of strategies
to prevent violence against
women and to improve the
sexual and reproductive
health of young people.
August 2013
Community Health
and Wellbeing Plan
20132017
Moonee Valley City Council
Womens Health Wests
submission highlighted
opportunities for council
to strengthen strategies to
promote positive mental
health by taking action
to prevent bullying and
unhealthy relationships
among young people
through whole-of-school
initiatives such as the Girls
Talk Guys Talk program.
I wont sign anything if I dont understand it;
they are not allowed to pressure me.
- Chin participant in financial literacy program
32
Womens Health West encourages workers
to identify professional development
opportunities to ensure we offer the best
possible services to women and children
in the region. In 201314, staff completed
238 professional development courses. The
following list is a sample of the paid courses,
workshops, seminars and conferences that
staff attended, broken down by teams.
Family violence
Common risk assessment framework training,
Swinburne University of Technology
Family violence hurts kids too, DVRCV
Resilience for staff in stressful settings,
Caraniche
Supporting your client through the family law
system, Womens Legal Service
Single session work, La Trobe University The
Bouverie Centre
Therapy with children using experimental
and creative arts, The Melbourne Institute for
Experiential and Creative Arts Therapy
Trauma informed practice for management and
leadership, Wodonga Institute of TAFE
Health promotion
Crime Prevention and Communities: Building
Better Local Solutions Conference, Australian
Institute of Criminology
Gender awareness training for NGO
professionals, International Womens
Development Agency
Imagining social equity: inaugural conference,
Melbourne Social Equity Institute
Operations, management and governance
Better Boards Australasia conference
NFP Briefing: Fundraising
Strategies, Australian
Institute of Company
Directors
Managing violent
situations, Community
Housing Federation
Media training for senior
staff, Plan to Win
PRESENTATIONS
We value the skills, knowledge and expertise of individuals, organisations and communities in our region and work
in collaboration with them. Part of this collaboration is to share what weve learnt along the way, and this year we
delivered more information sessions, conference presentations, sat on more expert panels and facilitated more forums,
workshops and training sessions than ever before. In 201213 Womens Health West delivered 20 presentations to
1,429 attendees, compared to 30 presentations to 1,814 attendees in 201314.
Who
July 2013
Sunshine Community Correctional Service
Hobsons Bay Council Community Group
Community health partner organisation
Local government Safety and Policing forum
August 2013
Womens Health West Sunrise Womens Group
September 2013
Werribee Mercy Hospital
Adolescent Family Violence Forum, Wyndham
Family Violence Committee
October 2013
Wingate Community Centre
Maternal and Child Health Conference
Jesuit Community College
Caroline Springs Police
Victoria University Elder Abuse Panel
November 2013
Barwon CASA, Violence Prevention: where to start
Sunshine Hospital
Zonta Club Melton
Doutta Galla Community Health Service
December 2013
Brimbank Gender Equity Forum
February 2014
Imagining Social Equity, two-day conference
March 2014
Church of All Nations
April 2014
You the Man expert panel co-presented by
Womens Health West family violence and health
promotion teams
African Community Leaders 360 Turn Around
partly funded by Moonee Valley City Council
May 2014
Flemington Community Centre
Gender and Disability Workforce Development
Program, Train the Trainer pilot
Our Bodies, Our Voices, Our Lives conference
Melbourne University
June 2014
Western Health Immediate Response Service
Australian Institute of Criminology Conference
Dame Phyllis Frost (co-facilitated by Womens
Health West family violence and health promotion
teams)
Dame Phyllis Frost, Womens Leadership,
Information and Self-Advocacy Program
Womens Health West Our Community, Our Rights
Topic
Attendees
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Gender equity in the prevention of violence against women
Gender equity training program for managers
Gender equity and prevention of violence against women
20
39
48
15
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Primary prevention to combat adolescent family violence
30
75
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
30
900
3
9
50
You, Me and Us respectful relationships education
Family violence
Preventing violence against women
Prevention of Violence Against Women reflective workshop
25
35
20
10
Business case for gender equity and workplace strategies
80
Action for Equity sexual and reproductive health promotion
50
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
12
Discussion following a theatre-based primary prevention
intervention that promotes bystander engagement
50
Gender equity and the role that leaders can play in the
prevention of violence against women
18
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Capacity building for delivering gender-equitable services
to prevent violence against women who have a disability
Leadership and advocacy for social change around FGM/C
Gender equity in urban planning and architecture
25
25
120
25
Family violence: Recognise, respond, refer
Partnership approach to preventing violence against women
Family violence, safety planning and service provision
40
20
10
Womens sexual and reproductive health and mental health
10
Prevention of violence against women and promotion of
gender equity
14
33
Communications
Media
This years media profile remained
much the same as the previous
year with Womens Health West
recording 63 stories compared to 60
in 201213 (figure 10).
Figure 10.
Social media
Publications
Events
Womens Health Wests social media
profile continued to grow this year
with steady increases as shown
in figure 11. Facebook followers
more than doubled from 111 to 235,
Twitter followers increased by 78
per cent and e-news subscribers
increased by 20 per cent. You
can find us at facebook.com/
womenshealthwest and twitter.com/
whwest and sign up for the e-news
at whwest.org.au
Womens Health West produced and
distributed our print newsletter again
this year in July and October 2103
and April 2014. We also designed
and produced new resources
and reports to support the health
promotion and family violence units.
In 201314, the total number of PDF
downloads from whwest.org.au was
1,112 and we distributed 24,228
printed resources.
Around 80 women attended our 25th
annual general meeting in November
2013. Performer Bronywn Calcutt
put Julia Gillards misogyny speech
to music in a fine introduction to a
debate on the future of womens
leadership. Victorian Womens Trust
CEO Mary Crooks, Professor Patricia
Grimshaw, social commentator and
writer extraordinaire Clementine
Ford, and our very own health
promotion worker Kate Hauser,
pitted their wits against each other
and arrived unanimously at the
conclusion that the future looks
bright for women in leadership.
Figure 11.
Top 5 downloaded resources
1. You, Me and Us peer educator
information kit
2. Preventing Violence Together
Action Plan
3. Toolkit for working in a feminist
organisation
4. What if the intervention order is
breached? brochure
5. Using the internet safely
factsheet
Top 5 printed resources
1. Life without family violence
wallet cards (translated into 12
languages)
2. Safe at Home safety planning
brochure
3. What if the intervention order is
breached? (brochure translated
into 3 languages)
4. Family Violence Crisis Outreach
Service brochure
5. Annual Report 2012-13
34
In March 2014 we partnered with
Maribyrnong Youth Services and
Brimbank Youth Services to organise
a youth-focussed International
Womens Day event. Cr Sarah
Carter, Maribyrnongs Gender
Equity Ambassador, and John
Watson, Chair of Brimbank City
Councils panel of administrators,
launched the event and the day
featured captivating dance, music
and spoken word performances
by talented local women and girls.
Planning is underway for the March
2015 event.
ABOVE: B-Breaks at the International Womens Day
celebration in March 2014
PHOTO: Simone Stabb
Our staff
Operations
Quality Accreditation
The Business Unit has changed its name to the Operations
Unit and is continuing its restructure to better reflect
its purpose and the role it provides in continuing to
effectively and efficiently support the program staff in their
service delivery. The Operations Unit comprises finance,
administration and operations, human resources, quality
improvement and communications.
Womens Health West is committed to continuous
improvement and has a robust quality management system
in place that is supported by regular reviews of policies,
procedures, incidents, corrective and preventive actions
and continuous improvement suggestions. Action plans
and evaluation exercises are also routinely reviewed and
implemented in areas including, but not limited to, fire, risk,
advocacy, staff and community consultation, and feedback.
We provided ongoing support and training, particularly for
reception/administration staff, to assist them to respond to
the complex requirements of women in the western region.
This year has been extremely busy and challenging for
the team with some changes in staffing and roles and a
large focus on assisting in preparation for re-accreditation
as well as a review and update of the organisational risk
management systems and policies. Womens Health West is
committed to continuous improvement in the management of
risk for the organisation and a review of the risk management
performance was conducted and the risk register updated.
The ICT review is continuing to ensure the systems for human
resources, document and information management and
quality are robust and will align with the growth and demands
of the organisation.
This year Womens Health West prepared for its first annual
surveillance audit of our quality management system since
successfully achieving certification as an ISO-accredited
quality organisation in July 2013. Australian HealthCare
Association Quality Certification Services will conduct the
audit in August 2014.
Australian Healthcare Associates audited our Victorian
Home and Community Care funded programs against the
Community Care Common Standards in August 2013. The
review identified that Womens Health Wests HACC-funded
services met 17 of the 18 expected outcomes. The required
improvement related to human resource management and
in September 2013 Womens Health West achieved full
compliance.
35
Work Health, Safety and
Environment
Womens Health West recognises that
good health, safety and wellbeing begin
in our workplace. Our work health,
safety and environment committee is
comprised of representatives from each
team, who report back on a standing
agenda item at each team meeting.
We meet quarterly to consider ideas
for improvement, monitor work health,
safety and environment and conduct
regular fire drills and safety audits. The
work health, safety and environment
committee reports to our Quality
Committee.
VicHealth research shows that
prolonged sitting in the workplace is
detrimental to our health. The committee
prompted discussions with individual
teams about ways to reduce this
risk and three health promotion staff
volunteered to trial an adjustable height
desk with positive results.
I love the stand up desk.
I have used it often,
as a break from sitting
and as a change in lighting.
I also find it easier to stay
focussed standing up.
- Health Promotion Worker
Womens Health West purchased 175
tonnes of CO2 offsets this year through
Carbon Neutral, who work with us to
measure, reduce and offset carbon
emissions created by our vehicle fleet,
electricity and natural gas use.
36
Feminist Audit
Recognising our employees
Womens Health West works within
a feminist framework to redress the
gendered and structural inequities that
limit the lives of women and girls. Each
year we conduct an organisation-wide
feminist audit that allows us to identify
and measure where we are succeeding,
and the areas of feminist principles,
practice and behaviour that we need to
strengthen.
Since 2008 Womens Health Wests
board of directors has presented three
innovation awards that acknowledge
the contribution of staff to developing
and maintaining an energetic, fair and
friendly workplace culture.
In 201314 we collated and analysed
data from past whole-of-organisation
workshops, three practice groups held
with senior managers and coordinators
to discuss feminist leadership, and
individual surveys completed by a
random sample of staff.
In May 2014, a one-year draft
action plan for working in a feminist
organisation was developed to drive
strategies that will strengthen feminist
practice in relation to our workplace
culture, work in teams, management
practices, work with clients and
community, and the organisation as a
whole.
The management team is reviewing
the plan. We are currently planning a
wholeoforganisation training session to
engage staff in further reflection around
feminist organisational principles,
practice and behaviour. The training will
also support staff to embed practical
strategies to strengthen feminist
practice in their work at Womens Health
West.
Awards are presented at the annual
general meeting, and in 2013 the
Very Inspiring, Totally Active award
went to Pai from the family violence
crisis accommodation team, for her
inspirational ability to hold onto the
stressful stories of her clients and
difficult crisis events while remaining
calm.
Maat is the Egyptian goddess of
truth, justice and balance. Jelena, our
Family Violence Outreach Coordinator,
won this award for her calm, steady
and thoughtful approach. Jelena is
knowledgeable, approachable, reliable
and efficient.
The Getting Off Your Arse award
recognised the efforts and energy of
Vicki Hester, who reinvigorated the
Sunrise program for women with a
disability through her woman-centred
approach.
LEFT: Bronwyn Calcutt performed Julia Gillards misogyny
speech to accordion music at the AGM in November 2013
RIGHT: Staff and members at the 2013 AGM
INSET: Local fundraising duo Women of the West
PHOTOS: Veronica Garcia
staff list
Chief Executive Officer
Robyn Gregory
Executive Assistant
Julie Veszpremi
Health Promotion
Family Violence Services
Family Violence
Services Manager
Jacky Tucker
Health Promotion
Managers
Annarella Hardiman, Helen
Makregiorgos
24-Hour Crisis
Response Coordinator
Luise (Simone)
Health Promotion
Coordinators
24-Hour Crisis
Response Workers
Brishna, Angela, Jessica
(Shauna)
Sally Camilleri^, Elly Taylor,
Felicity Marlowe, Jenna Tuke,
(Lucy Forwood)
Casual 24-Hour Crisis
Response and After
Hours Workers
Samreen, Rima, Asha, Intesar,
Nura
Health Promotion
Workers
Crisis Accommodation
Services Coordinator
Sophie Campbell
Kate Hauser, Patricia Hayes,
Ellen Kleimaker, Kirsten
Campbell, Shifrah Blustein,
Stephanie Rich, Django Love,
Anna Vu*, Melanie Sleap*
Sunrise Project Worker
Vicki Hester
Crisis Accommodation
Services Workers
Amanda, Evelyn, Mishelle,
Gwenyth, Pai (Mylinh)
FARREP Community
Workers
Shukria Alewi*, Intesar, Nura
Outreach Coordinator
Tess (Jelena)
Community Evaluator
May Joy Toke
Family Violence
Outreach Workers
Michelle, Victoria, Irene,
Katrina, Darlene, Zoe, Hatice,
Jude, Kim, Lisa (Jess)
You, Me and Us Peer
Educators
Intensive Case Manager
(Susan)
Adile Llugiqi, Adut Akol,
Alexandra Jones, Amy Vy,
Arop Lual, Asha Acuoth, Asia
Eltayeb, Athony Lual, Belinda
Spagnoletti, Caitlyn Fisher,
Charlie Martin, Chipopo Bako,
Clara Walker, Elesha Williams,
Elizabeth Ferguson, Elyce
Sandri, Erin Lockington, Grace
Bigby, Grace Torcasio, Hay
Nay Moo Noe, Jai Atkins, Jen
Pham, Jessica MacDonald,
Jessica Voogt, Joyceline Atai,
Juliet Nakhla, Kate Hauser, Kim
Trinh, Kirsten Graham, Krysten
Attridge, Lana Howitt, Laura
Partington, Laura Williams,
Marion Subah, Mateja Popovic,
Morgan Cataldo, Nej Llugiqi,
Nirvana Bhandary, Oparine
Bongwa, Reanna Clark, Rosa
Koua, Shashini Dissanayake,
Shea Carruthers, Steph
Huggins, Thakshila Tilakaratne,
Tylaa Ryan
Disability Intensive Case Iris
Manager
CALD Housing Worker
Phuong
Intake Coordinator
Hang
Casual Intake / 24Hour
Crisis Response
Workers
Nikol, Colette, Sarah,
Stephanie, Kerry, Michelle,
Gabby, Chen-Fang, Merryn
Counselling
Coordinator/Practitioner
Melissa
Childrens Counsellors
Aoibheann, Stephanie, Nadine
(Bronte, Kim)
Casual Counsellor
Alice
Regional Family Violence Integration
Regional Integration
Coordinator
Maureen Smith
Administrative Support
Worker
Emma Breheny
Operations
Business Unit Manager
(Lara Polak)
Senior Finance Worker
Meriem Idris
Finance Officers
Debra Wannan, Gayle
Crawford
Receptionist / Admin
Worker
Poppy Mihalakos, Shan Keng
(Kirstie McLeod)
Quality Worker
(Maria Stillman)
Communications
Communications
Manager
Nicola Harte
Information / Admin
Worker
(Veronica Garcia)
Communications Worker Karin Holzknecht
^ means long service leave
* means maternity leave
( ) means resigned
37
key partnerships
As a small organisation with a region-wide mandate, Womens Health Wests greatest strength in achieving equity
and justice for women in the west is through robust partnerships. We commit significant resources to working with
other organisations to further our goals.
National
Australian Womens Health Network
Australian Health Promotion Association
Statewide
African Workers Network meeting
Council to Homeless Persons
Domestic Violence Victoria
Gender Equity in Local Government working group
Partners in Prevention Network
Statewide Violence Against Women and Children Forum
Victorian Council of Social Service
Womens Health Association of Victoria
Womens Mental Health Network Victoria
Womens Refuge and Outreach Service Meeting
Regional
Action for Equity Regional Reference Group
Action for Equity Practice Groups
Brimbank Family Violence Prevention Network
Brimbank Safety Roundtable
Brimbank Social Justice Summit
Centre for Womens Health, Gender and Society Advisory Board University of Melbourne
City of Melbourne Preventing Violence Against Women Coordination Committee
Community Housing Federation of Victoria
Community and Womens Health Health Promotion Network
Community Safety Stakeholder Group
Court Users Forum
Department of Justices Reducing Violence against Women and their Children Community of Practice
Extreme Risk Strategy Reference Group
Girls Talk Guys Talk Community of Practice
HealthWest Partnership
Inner North West Melbourne Medicare Local
Inner North West Primary Care Partnership
Macedon Ranges North West Melbourne Medicare Local
Maribyrnong Jobs Governance Committee
Melton Family Violence Committee
Melbourne Safe Community Committee
Moonee Valley Public Health and Wellbeing Community Committee
North West FARREP Governance Group
North West FARREP Network
North West Region Community and Womens Health CEOs and Managers
Preventing Violence Together Implementation Committee
Victoria University Social Work Unit Advisory Board
Western Homelessness Network Reference Group
Western Integrated Family Violence Committee
Western Integrated Family Violence Partnership: Governance group
Western Integrated Family Violence Partnership: Operations group
Western Indigenous Family Violence Regional Action Group
Western Local Services Network Reference Group
Western Think Child Working Group
Wyndham Community Safety Committee
Wyndham Family Violence Committee
Wyndham H3 Working Group
Wyndham Integrated Justice Precinct Advisory Group
38
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
WHAV representative
Member
Member
Supporter
Member
Convenor
Convenor
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Convenor
Board member
IHP network member
Member
Governance group
IHP network member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Convener
Member
Member
Member
Chair (Shared role)
Member
Member
Member
Chair
Member
Member
Member
Member
governance
Womens Health West is incorporated under the Associations Incorporation Act and our affairs are managed by a
board of directors (the board). The nine directors are drawn from and elected by our individual and organisational
members the community and sector in which we work.
The role of the board is to govern the organisation by
setting the strategic direction, and ensuring operations
are legal and finances sound; operational management is
delegated to the Chief Executive Officer. Duty statements
clearly define directors roles to ensure the skills of
individual directors appropriately match the requirements
of each position. Board directors have a broad and diverse
skill set and take proactive steps to provide enhanced
service delivery, such as a recent board-led initiative of an
advocacy plan to identify opportunities for Womens Health
West to optimise its areas of influence and stakeholder
consultation.
BOARD DIRECTORS
Strategic planning processes are in place and a robust
system of reporting to the board is embedded within
the organisation. Risk management and continuous
improvement processes are also well established and
review and implementation of issues relating to these areas
are centrally monitored through comprehensive individual
registers.
Ruth Marshall, Treasurer (Retired November 2013)
Financial accountability is maintained through a board
treasurer and finance and risk committee, with independent
audited financial statements being prepared each year in
line with funding and regulatory requirements.
Directors are elected for a two-year term, and may serve
for up to three consecutive terms. They are expected to:
Have a commitment to Womens Health Wests
vision, values and direction and be familiar with the
organisations affairs and those of the sector more
broadly
Make every effort to attend all of the monthly board
meetings (quorum is five)
Be willing to serve on one or more board standing
committees or task groups
The board appoints a chair, deputy chair and treasurer,
who hold office for one year and may be re-appointed. The
board reports to members at the annual general meeting
where the annual report, including the audited financial
report for the year just ended, is presented.
Georgie Hill, Chair (Retired November 2013)
Healthy Communities Coordinator, Wyndham City Council
BA, Postgrad Cert Social Science
Leigh Russell, Chair (Appointed December 2013)
Consultancy and Coaching Director
BA, Grad Dip Ed (Secondary), Grad Dip Soc Science
(Counselling), Grad Cert Career Counselling for Elite
Performers, Grad Dip Bus
Senior Business Analyst, Western Health Service
Chartered Management Accountant
Karen Passey, Treasurer (Appointed December 2013)
CEO, SIDS and Kids Victoria
RN, RM, Grad Dip in Management, Cert Finance, Cert
Emergency Nursing, Paediatric Cert
Lara Rafferty, Deputy Chair
Manager, People and Fairness, Human Resources,
University of Melbourne
BA, Postgrad Dip (Psychological Studies)
Peta Olive, Deputy Chair
Special Counsel at Aitken Partners/Lawyers and Advisors
BA, LL.B (Hons)
Samantha Merrigan, Board Director
General Manager, Group Internal Audit - Telstra
LL.B, Postgrad Business Admin, Postgrad Management
Psychology
Claire Culley, Board Director
Divisional Director Surgical Services, Western Health
RN, BA AppSc, Master of Public Health
Catherine Bateman, Board Director
Youth Health Officer, Darebin Community Health
RN, Bach. App.Sc. (Health Promotion), Master of Public
Health
Catherine Harding, Board Director (co-opted March
2014)
Government and Community Engagement Manager
The Good Foundation and Jamies Ministry of Food
Australia
BA LL.B (Hons) Master of Public and International Law
Nicola Rabt, Board Director (co-opted March 2014)
Consultant
B.Soc.Sci, M.Soc.Sci (research)
39
ORGANISATIONAL CHART
MEETING ATTENDANCE
Board mtg
(inc AGM)
Industrial
relations
task group
Finance
and risk
committee
Leigh Russell
11*
10
Lara Rafferty
11
10
Peta Olive
11
Karen Passey
11
Catherine Bateman
11
Claire Culley
11
Samantha Merrigan
11
Nicola Rabt
Catherine Harding
Robyn Gregory
11
10
ATTENDANCE where
E is eligible to attend and A
is attended
Lara Polak
(Business Manager)
Georgie Hill
(Retired AGM 2013)
Ruth Marshall
(Retired AGM 2013)
4
4
1
2
7*
Performance
and
succession
task group
3*
Constitutional
task group
Where a director is not a member of a committee the area is left blank. The chair of the committee is indicated with an asterisk (*)
40
1
1
2
6
2
4
Board
planning day
FINANCIAL REPORTS
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2014
DECLARATION BY
MEMBERS OF THE BOARD
The members of the Board
declare that:
1. The financial statements and
notes:
(a) comply with Accounting
Standards and Australian
equivalent of the International
Reporting Standards (AIFRS) as
detailed in Note 1 to the financial
statements
(b) give a true and fair view of
Womens Health West financial
position as at 30 June 2014 and of
its performance for the year ended
on that date in accordance with the
accounting policies described in
Note 1 to the financial statements
(c) are, in the Boards opinion, in
accordance with the Incorporated
Associations Act of Victoria
2. In the opinion of the Members
of the Board there are reasonable
grounds to believe that the
organisation will be able to pay its
debts as and when they become
due and payable
This declaration is made in
accordance with a resolution of the
Members of the Board by:
Samantha Merrigan
Acting Chairperson
Karen Passey
Treasurer
41
BALANCE SHEET
INCOME STATEMENT
2014
2013
4,326,617
3,664,464
3,431
2,738
Other Grants
66,604
65,696
Other Income
33,383
32,405
Interest
45,000
44,999
Donations
21,314
14,677
4,496,349
3,824,979
Employee benefits expenses
1(j)
3,342,462
2,961,863
Management &
Administrative expenses
1(j)
298,456
127,985
62,626
52,283
Note
State Government Operating
Grants
Local Government
Operating Grants
Total Income
Motor Vehicle expenses
Depreciation expense
Note
99,873
92,719
Occupancy expenses
11
268,571
246,009
ICT expenses
1(j)
73,046
52,316
Client Support Services
1(j)
282,971
214,651
Training & Development
1(j)
39,319
53,482
Communication
1(j)
Total Expenses
Net Surplus/(Deficit) from
ordinary activities
22,280
27,569
4,489,603
3,828,877
6,746
(3,898)
2014
2013
Receipts from grants etc
Interest received
Payments to suppliers and
employees
Receivables
2,590,544
2,457,530
121,924
60,996
Prepayments
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS
9,553
28,716
2,722,021
2,547,242
265,592
223,774
265,592
223,774
2,987,613
2,771,016
1,625,122
1,565,211
Non-Current Assets
Property, plant and equipment
TOTAL NON-CURRENT
ASSETS
TOTAL ASSETS
Current Liabilities
Payables
Provisions
TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES
326,641
336,067
1,951,763
1,901,278
Non-Current Liabilities
Provisions
62,188
43,313
62,188
43,313
2,013,952
1,944,591
973,661
826,425
343,941
337,195
1(i),
629,721
489,230
973,661
826,425
TOTAL NON-CURRENT
LIABILITIES
TOTAL LIABILITIES
NET ASSETS
EQUITY
STATEMENT IN CHANGES IN EQUITY
4,301,247
4,131,646
45,000
44,999
(4,102,872)
9(b)
9(a)
TOTAL EQUITY
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net Cash provided by (used
in) operating activities
Cash and cash equivalents
Reserves
Note
2013
$
Current Assets
Retained Surplus
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
2014
243,375
(3,589,916)
586,729
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Proceeds from (payments
for) property, plant and
equipment
(110,361)
(58,666)
Net Cash used in investing
activities
(110,361)
(58,666)
Retained
Earnings
General
Reserve
Total
Balance at 30 June 2013
337,195
489,230
826,425
Profit/(Loss) attributable
to members
6,746
140,491
147,236
Balance at 30 June 2014
343,941
629,721
973,661
Borrowings (repayments) for
leased equipment
Net Cash used in financing
activities
Net increase (decrease) in
cash held
133,014
528,063
2,457,530
1,929,467
1. STATEMENT OF ACCOUNTING POLICIES
This financial statement is a general purpose financial
statement that has been prepared in accordance with
Australian Accounting Standards and other mandatory
professional reporting requirements and the requirements of
the Incorporated Associations Act of Victoria 1981. They are
compiled on a going concern basis adopting the principles
of historical cost accounting and do not reflect current
valuations of noncurrent assets except where stated. This
financial report has been prepared on an accruals basis.
2,590,544
2,457,530
The full financial report is available on request
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Cash at the beginning of the
financial period
Cash at the end of the
financial period
42
9(a)
Acronyms
ACMI
Australian Centre for the Moving Image
AGM
Annual General Meeting
AHA
APTCH
Australian Healthcare Associates
A Place to Call Home
CALD
Culturally and Linguistically Diverse
CAS
Crisis Accommodation Services
CASA
Centre Against Sexual Assault
CEO
Chief Executive Officer
cohealth
Community health organisation formed from
merger between Doutta Galla Community
Health, North Yarra Community Health and
Western Region Health Centre
Table of figures
Fig 1 Income ......................................................... 6
Fig 2
Expenditure................................................... 6
Fig 3
Family Violence Services Data...................... 10
Fig 4
Court Support 20092014............................. 10
DHS
Department of Human Services
Fig 5
Housing Outcomes for CALD Women.......... 10
DVRCV
Domestic Violence Resource Centre Victoria
Fig 6
Police Referrals 20062014..........................11
FARREP
Family and Reproductive Rights Education
Program
Fig 7
Intake Service Access Type.......................... 11
FGM/C
Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting
Fig 8
Cultural Identity of Outreach Clients............. 11
GLBTI
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and
intersex
Fig 9
Intake Contacts by LGA 20112014............. 11
HACC
Home and Community Care
ICM
Intensive Case Management
ICT
Information and Communication Technology
IHP
Integrated Health Promotion
ISO
International Organization for Standardization
LGA
Local Government Area
MoU
Memorandum of Understanding
NFP
Not For Profit
NGO
Non-Government Organisation
PCP
Primary Care Partnership
PVT
Preventing Violence Together
RAMP
Risk Assessment and Management Panel
Front cover Our Community, Our Rights participants
Photograph Scout Kozakiewicz
SPLASh
Safe Place for Laughter And Sharing
ABN 24 036 234 159
STI
Sexually Transmitted Infection
VCOSS
Victorian Council of Social Services
VicHealth
Victorian Health Promotion Foundation
WELS
Western English Language School
WHAV
Womens Health Association of Victoria
WHW
Womens Health West
WIFVC
Western Integrated Family Violence Committee
WYPIN
Western Young Peoples Independent Network
Fig 10 Media Coverage 20102014......................... 34
Fig 11 Social Media Marketing Reach..................... 34
Annual Report 20132014
ISSN 1834-710X
Publisher
Printed
Printer
Editors
Designer
Illustrations
Womens Health West
November 2014
Whirlwind Print
Robyn Gregory, Nicola Harte
Nicola Harte
Isis and Pluto
Womens Health West acknowledges the
support of the Victorian Government
43
Are you a member?
JOIN US!
All women living,
working or studying
in the western
metropolitan region
of Melbourne are
eligible to join Womens
Health West, as are
organisations whose
client base includes
the western region.
Membership is free
and includes a great
print newsletter, an
e-newsletter and
invitations to the annual
general meeting and
International Womens
Day events.
Donate
Womens Health West receives funding
from the state government but we rely
on grants and donations to help us
extend our services.
Most importantly,
our members help to
strengthen the voice
of an organisation
working to bring
equity and justice to
women in the west.
$7
$30
Donations are tax deductible.
For more information visit
whwest.org.au/about-us/donations/
$150
$1,000
To find out more
contact us on
03 9689 9588,
[email protected]
or join online at
whwest.org.au
allows us to top up a myki for a
woman escaping violence
allows us to provide interpreters
for human relationships education
sessions for young CALD women
or to give a toiletry pack to a woman
escaping violence
or to give a childrens pack to a
child who has had to leave home
without their belongings
allows us to pay for accommodation
when there are no beds available in
overcrowded refuges
would assist us to run a young
womens leadership program
Any support that you provide will have a very real
impact on our ability to meet the needs of women
in the west
www.whwest.org.au
Phone: 03 9689 9588 Fax: 03 9689 3861 Email: [email protected]