The challenge to identify meaningful metrics to track progress is real. It takes investment, time and expertise to set the foundations for measuring social progress.
With its foundational dimensions of inclusion, equity and fairness, the government’s new wellbeing framework resonates deeply with the health justice approach to wellbeing.
How do you decide what data you need to collect when you’re starting a health justice partnership?
There are great opportunities for effective measurement and evaluation of collaborative responses to complex problems.
Can placing a lawyer into a healthcare team help services respond better to the complex problems arising from domestic and family violence?
We’re working with health justice partnerships to identify how combining health and legal services can make a difference and for whom.