By Residents, for Residents: Evaluating a Community-Led Peer Health Education Program in Australian Social Housing Communities
Esther Tordjmann, Fiona Haigh

TL;DR
This paper evaluates a peer-led health education program in Australian social housing communities, showing it improves health access and trust in marginalized populations.
Contribution
The study provides insights into the mechanisms and success factors of community-led peer health education in socially disadvantaged settings.
Findings
A strength-based, community-led model effectively addresses health inequities in areas of entrenched disadvantage.
Program flexibility, holistic focus, and trust-building were crucial for success.
Long-term resources and valuing the process are critical for sustaining change in integrated care.
Abstract
Socially disadvantaged and marginalised groups experience significant barriers to accessing healthcare compounded by the complexity and lack of integration between health services. Social housing residents face persisting health inequities linked to poverty, stigma and chronic conditions. International evidence suggests tailored, community-based initiatives can advance health and equity by building capacity, trust and engagement, notably through peer-based roles. However, there is little detailed literature on the mechanisms that support successful implementation and impacts across both community and health systems. The paper describes the implementation and evaluation of a community-driven and co-designed peer-to-peer health education program in social housing communities in Australia. We use a mixed-methods, realist-informed methodology to assess the program’s effectiveness and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCommunity Health and Development · Healthcare innovation and challenges · Mental Health and Patient Involvement
