Australia's Pacific community — Samoan, Tongan, Fijian, Cook Island, Niuean, Tuvaluan, and other Pacific Islander peoples — faces distinct health challenges. Pacific peoples in Australia experience higher rates of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity, and mental health challenges than the general population. Yet they are often underserved by mainstream health services, face cultural and language barriers, and are underrepresented in health research. Grant funding supports culturally appropriate health services, community health education, chronic disease prevention, mental health support, and the Pacific-led health organisations that understand what their communities need.
Who Australia's Pacific community is
Health challenges facing Pacific peoples
Cultural factors in health
Department of Health and Aged Care
National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA)
Some Pacific funding through multicultural programs.
State health departments
The Vincent Fairfax Family Foundation
Pacific community programs.
Pacific community foundations
Emerging Pacific-led grantmaking.
Western Sydney primary health networks
Health literacy and community health for Pacific populations.
Church-linked foundations
Pacific churches as community health access points; some linked to foundations.
Chronic disease prevention and management
Mental health
Health literacy and navigation
Oral health
Maternal and child health
Youth health
Men's health
Workforce development
For Pacific communities, churches are the primary community institution — more trusted and more accessible than formal health services for many Pacific Australians. Programs delivered through or partnering with Pacific churches reach communities that clinical health services do not:
- Health checks at church events
- Diabetes screening at church gatherings
- Mental health awareness in church settings
- Health champions who are also church leaders
Grant applications that leverage Pacific church networks for health programs are more likely to reach the community effectively.
Community-led design
Pacific communities are diverse — Samoan, Tongan, Fijian, Cook Island communities each have distinct cultures, languages, and health patterns. Applications designed by and with Pacific communities, not for them, are more credible and effective.
Church partnership
The church is the most trusted institution in most Pacific communities. Applications with genuine church partnership — not tokenistic involvement — are better positioned to reach the community.
Cultural appropriateness
Health programs that acknowledge traditional food culture, collectivist decision-making, and community social structures are more acceptable to Pacific communities than programs that require individual behaviour change contrary to cultural norms.
Chronic disease priority
Given the scale of diabetes and cardiovascular disease burden in Pacific communities, applications addressing chronic disease prevention — at a population level, not just individual — are high-priority.
Tahua's grants management platform supports Pacific health funders and Pasifika health organisations — with community reach tracking, health outcome measurement, program participation data, and the reporting tools that help Pasifika health funders demonstrate their investment in Pacific health equity.