- Name: Amy Foulkes
- Role: Data Analyst - Health System Integration and Innovation
- Location: Cairns
How does your role contribute to the health of northern Queenslanders? As a data analyst for the Primary Health Network, I work on transforming complex data into meaningful insights that drive better planning, understanding, and decision-making. This includes developing dashboards that help track GP access, mental health services, and regional profiles along with capturing population health analysis to better understand the unique and diverse needs of our communities. My role also involves supporting strategic planning and delivery through data analysis, helping support data quality and literacy (to improve how we understand and respond to data that informs the health of our community) and contributing data science experience to build stronger data tools for partners, providers, and decision-makers.
By making health data more accessible, clear, and actionable, I help ensure that women in our region can have more care that is informed, equitable, and responsive to their needs.
What does International Women’s Day mean to you? To me, International Women’s Day is a time to recognise the diverse ways women have contributed to shape our current opportunities, rights, and access while reflecting on the real gaps that still exist in representation, equity, and opportunity.
As a woman in a STEM role, I have such gratitude for the efforts of those before me and how they have paved a way so I can contribute to a field I love, leveraging my strengths in mathematics and technology to improve lives. But while celebrating this progress I also acknowledge the biases that continue to affect society and how that plays into the very data that is collected and analysed to inform our decisions.
This day is also an opportunity to celebrate female leaders in their fields who are working to make data more ethical, representative, and diverse. At the same time recognising the often-invisible labour that many women perform alongside their primary vocations while striving for excellence within them.
What message would you like to share with women about prioritising their health and wellbeing? Health literacy is an essential tool to prioritising health and wellbeing. Understand your health by leaning on strong sources of information, seeking out trusted medical professionals, be willing to ask questions to take ownership of your wellbeing.
Also, one of the most overlooked aspects of contributing factors to women’s health is time. Globally men access significantly more leisure and rest time than women, which is reflected strongly in Australia. This imbalance affects our daily lives and ability to invest in our health. It’s important we feel empowered to take up space and prioritise our wellbeing as a priority.
Is there anything else you might like to add? Data is a tool we can all use to drive equity and a strong and healthy future for women in our region. It can help us identify disparities, challenge bias, and push for improvements that benefit women’s health in our communities. Celebrating IWD is an opportunity to recognise those who lead in health utilise innovation for a community where health is accessible and inclusive.