Wilson Tom
Queensland Centre for Population Research, School of Geography, Planning and Environmental Management, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2014 May 27;9(5):e97576. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0097576. eCollection 2014.
The Indigenous population of Australia suffers considerable disadvantage across a wide range of socio-economic indicators, and is therefore the focus of many policy initiatives attempting to 'close the gap' between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. Unfortunately, past population estimates have proved unreliable as denominators for these indicators. The aim of the paper is to contribute more robust estimates for the Northern Territory Indigenous population for the period 1966-2011, and hence estimate one of the most important of socio-economic indicators, life expectancy at birth.
A consistent time series of population estimates from 1966 to 2011, based off the more reliable 2011 official population estimates, was created by a mix of reverse and forward cohort survival. Adjustments were made to ensure sensible sex ratios and consistency with recent birth registrations. Standard life table methods were employed to estimate life expectancy. Drawing on an approach from probabilistic forecasting, confidence intervals surrounding population numbers and life expectancies were estimated.
The Northern Territory Indigenous population in 1966 numbered between 23,800 and 26,100, compared to between 66,100 and 73,200 in 2011. In 1966-71 Indigenous life expectancy at birth lay between 49.1 and 56.9 years for males and between 49.7 and 57.9 years for females, whilst by 2006-11 it had increased to between 60.5 and 66.2 years for males and between 65.4 and 70.8 for females. Over the last 40 years the gap with all-Australian life expectancy has not narrowed, fluctuating at about 17 years for both males and females. Whilst considerable progress has been made in closing the gap in under-five mortality, at most other ages the mortality rate differential has increased.
A huge public health challenge remains. Efforts need to be redoubled to reduce the large gap in life expectancy between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.
澳大利亚原住民在一系列社会经济指标方面处于相当不利的地位,因此成为许多旨在“缩小”澳大利亚原住民与非原住民之间差距的政策举措的关注焦点。不幸的是,过去的人口估计已被证明作为这些指标的分母并不可靠。本文的目的是为1966 - 2011年北领地原住民人口提供更可靠的估计,从而估算最重要的社会经济指标之一,即出生时预期寿命。
基于更可靠的2011年官方人口估计,通过反向和正向队列生存混合方法创建了1966年至2011年一致的人口估计时间序列。进行了调整以确保合理的性别比并与近期出生登记保持一致。采用标准生命表方法来估计预期寿命。借鉴概率预测方法,估计了人口数量和预期寿命的置信区间。
1966年北领地原住民人口数量在23,800至26,100之间,而2011年在66,100至73,200之间。1966 - 1971年,原住民男性出生时预期寿命在49.1至56.9岁之间,女性在49.7至57.9岁之间,而到2006 - 2011年,男性增至60.5至66.2岁,女性增至65.4至70.8岁。在过去40年中,与全澳大利亚预期寿命的差距并未缩小,男性和女性均波动在约17岁左右。虽然在缩小五岁以下儿童死亡率差距方面取得了相当大的进展,但在大多数其他年龄段,死亡率差异有所增加。
巨大的公共卫生挑战依然存在。需要加倍努力以缩小澳大利亚原住民与非原住民之间预期寿命的巨大差距。