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Issue Addressed
<p>This study explores how community health and social service providers in Tasmania perceive local health challenges, navigate system barriers, and support socioeconomically disadvantaged populations. In the context of Tasmania's ongoing public health reform, these perspectives are critical for shaping equitable strategies grounded in lived experience.</p>
Method
<p>Semi-structured interviews were conducted with leaders from diverse health and social service organisations in southern Tasmania. Analysis combined inductive thematic coding with a critical realist framework to map relationships between the local context, mechanisms of change, and outcomes.</p>
Results
<p>Health risks and chronic conditions are closely entwined with socioeconomic disadvantage, unmet basic needs, and systemic challenges. Providers responded with adaptive, community-based strategies emphasising trust, accessibility, and contextual sensitivity. Yet, these mechanisms were constrained by limited resources, low health literacy, and broader contextual barriers, producing mixed outcomes ranging from engagement and empowerment to persistent disengagement and cycles of poor health.</p>
Conclusion
<p>Community health and social service providers are essential intermediaries, bridging gaps through integrated, localised programs. Findings support Tasmania's vision for an integrated wellbeing approach and highlight the need for greater investments in prevention, stronger local governance and coordination, and strategies that address the structural determinants of health and enhanced community participation.</p>
So What?
<p>This study extends Tasmanian health promotion scholarship by foregrounding provider perspectives and provides a unique system-level account of how providers adapt to entrenched disadvantage. It also demonstrates the value of a critical realist lens for understanding cycles of disadvantage. Together, these insights offer practical guidance for equity-oriented public health reform.</p>
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