Indigenous Mental Health Grants in Australia: Funding Social and Emotional Wellbeing

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mental health is fundamentally different from non-Indigenous mental health in its context, causation, and appropriate response. Social and emotional wellbeing (SEWB) — the holistic Indigenous concept of health that encompasses body, mind, family, community, country, and spirit — is the preferred framework. The mental health challenges facing First Nations Australians are rooted in the continuing impacts of colonisation, dispossession, and intergenerational trauma — and require community-controlled, culturally grounded responses. Grant funding supports SEWB services, healing programmes, community-controlled mental health, and the Indigenous leadership that drives self-determined wellbeing.

Indigenous social and emotional wellbeing

The framework

Social and Emotional Wellbeing (SEWB) is the preferred term for Indigenous mental health in Australia — it acknowledges that wellbeing is holistic and relational:
- Connection to body and behaviours
- Connection to mind and emotions
- Connection to family and kinship
- Connection to community
- Connection to country
- Connection to culture and spirituality

Western mental health frameworks — individual diagnosis and treatment — miss much of what matters for Indigenous wellbeing.

The burden

  • Psychological distress: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people experience significantly higher rates
  • Suicide: Indigenous Australians die by suicide at approximately twice the non-Indigenous rate
  • Trauma: intergenerational trauma from colonisation, Stolen Generations, ongoing racism
  • Social determinants: poverty, housing instability, incarceration — all drive poor mental health

Causes

Mental health challenges in Indigenous communities cannot be separated from their causes:
- Dispossession from country (country is central to identity and wellbeing)
- Stolen Generations (children removed from families — trauma continues through generations)
- Racism and discrimination (a direct cause of psychological harm)
- Ongoing disadvantage in health, housing, employment, and education

Government Indigenous mental health funding

NACCHO (National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation)

Coordinates community-controlled primary health, including SEWB.

Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs)

Primary health care services run by and for communities — major SEWB service providers.

Department of Health

Indigenous mental health programmes funding.

Closing the Gap

Mental health and suicide prevention as part of Closing the Gap targets.

PHNs (Primary Health Networks)

Commission Indigenous mental health services.

Philanthropic Indigenous mental health funders

Beyond Blue

National mental health organisation — Indigenous focus programmes.

Black Dog Institute

Mental health research including Indigenous mental health.

Lifeline Australia

Crisis support including Indigenous communities.

The Paul Ramsay Foundation

Ending disadvantage including Indigenous health.

Various Indigenous-specific foundations

Some foundations specifically fund Indigenous wellbeing and healing.

Types of funded Indigenous mental health programmes

Social and emotional wellbeing services

  • SEWB counselling and support workers (culturally safe)
  • Indigenous social and emotional wellbeing teams in ACCHOs
  • Healing programmes (culture as healing)
  • On-country healing programmes

Suicide prevention

  • Indigenous-specific suicide prevention (higher rates require targeted response)
  • Community-led suicide prevention strategies
  • Postvention (supporting communities after a suicide)
  • Safe messaging about suicide in Indigenous communities

Trauma-informed care

  • Healing from intergenerational trauma
  • Stolen Generations healing
  • Residential school survivor support
  • Trauma-informed practice in all Indigenous services

Healing programmes

  • Culture camps (reconnecting young people to country and culture)
  • Men's healing programmes
  • Women's healing circles
  • Elders-led healing

Community-controlled mental health

  • ACCHOs providing SEWB services
  • Community governance of mental health programmes
  • Indigenous-run mental health services

Alcohol and drug (dual diagnosis)

  • Addressing substance use as a mental health issue
  • SEWB and alcohol/drug integrated services
  • Healing from addiction with cultural approaches

Youth mental health

  • Young Indigenous people (significantly higher suicide rates)
  • Youth on country programmes
  • Indigenous youth leadership and identity
  • Mental health in schools for Indigenous students

Family and community healing

  • Family healing (family dysfunction often rooted in trauma)
  • Community healing after traumatic events
  • Collective healing approaches

Workforce development

  • Training Indigenous SEWB workers
  • Cultural training for non-Indigenous mental health workers
  • Indigenous psychology workforce development
  • Lived experience in Indigenous mental health

Research

  • SEWB-specific research frameworks
  • Indigenous-led research on mental health
  • Evaluation of culturally appropriate models

Healing country

The connection between country and wellbeing for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples is profound — country is not just a place but an identity, a responsibility, and a source of spiritual and emotional sustenance. Disconnection from country (through dispossession, urbanisation, or inability to care for country) harms wellbeing.

Programmes that reconnect people to country — on-country healing, ranger programmes, cultural burning — are simultaneously environmental and mental health interventions.

Grant application considerations

Community control

The most effective Indigenous mental health programmes are community-controlled. Applications demonstrating genuine community governance — not just community consultation — are more credible and more effective.

Cultural grounding

Culture is not an add-on to mental health — for many Indigenous Australians, cultural reconnection IS the mental health intervention. Applications that embed cultural practice in mental health support are more sophisticated.

Avoiding medicalisation

Many Indigenous mental health funders are wary of purely clinical mental health models that don't address social determinants, trauma history, or cultural factors. Applications that address the whole person and their context are more aligned with SEWB.

Trauma-informed

All Indigenous mental health programmes must be trauma-informed — acknowledging the specific historical and ongoing traumas of colonisation. Applications that demonstrate trauma-informed practice from the ground up are more credible.


Tahua's grants management platform supports Indigenous mental health funders and community-controlled health organisations — with SEWB outcome tracking, programme reach data, cultural healing measurement, and the reporting tools that help Indigenous mental health funders demonstrate their investment in the social and emotional wellbeing of First Nations Australians.

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