Markwick Alison, Ansari Zahid, Clinch Darren, McNeil John
Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Victoria 3004, Australia.
Aboriginal Health and Wellbeing Branch, Victorian Department of Health and Human Services, 50 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne, Victoria 3000, Australia.
SSM Popul Health. 2018 Oct 29;7:010-10. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2018.10.010. eCollection 2019 Apr.
There is a persistent gap in the health of Aboriginal Victorians compared with non-Aboriginal Victorians, where Aboriginal Victorians have poorer health. Currently, the most commonly touted explanation for this gap revolves around health behaviours known as 'lifestyle risk factors'. Yet the gap in health is similarly matched by persistent gaps in social and economic outcomes that reflect past and ongoing discrimination of Aboriginal peoples across Australia. Perceived racism has been implicated as a key determinant of the gap in health between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples across the world. We sought to determine the contribution of perceived racism to the gap in health and how this compared with the contribution of lifestyle risk factors and other determinants of health such as socioeconomic status.
We combined data from 2011, 2012 and 2014 Victorian Population Health Surveys (VPHS) to obtain a sample size of 33,833 Victorian adults, including 387 Aboriginal adults. The VPHS is a population-representative, cross-sectional, computer-assisted telephone interview survey conducted annually. Using logistic regression, poor self-reported health status was the dependent variable and Aboriginal status was the primary independent variable of interest. Secondary independent variables included age, sex, perceived racism, socioeconomic status, and lifestyle risk factors.
Aboriginal Victorians were almost twice as likely as non-Aboriginal Victorians to report poor health; OR=1.9 (95% confidence interval; 1.3-2.6). Perceived racism explained 34% of the gap in self-reported health status between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Victorians, followed by: smoking (32%), unhealthy bodyweight (20%), socioeconomic status (15%), excessive consumption of alcohol (13%), and abstinence from alcohol consumption (13%). In contrast, physical inactivity made no contribution. Together, perceived racism and smoking explained 58% of the gap, while all secondary independent variables explained 82% of the gap.
Perceived racism may be an independent health risk factor that explains more than a third of the health gap between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Victorians; equivalent in strength to smoking. The recognised failure of the Australian government's Closing the Gap strategy may be due in part to the failure to consider other determinants of the health gap beyond the lifestyle risk factors, namely racism, which may act to damage health through multiple pathways at multiple points along the causal chain.
与非原住民维多利亚人相比,原住民维多利亚人的健康状况一直存在差距,前者的健康状况更差。目前,对此差距最常被提及的解释围绕着被称为“生活方式风险因素”的健康行为。然而,健康差距同样伴随着社会和经济成果方面的持续差距,这反映了澳大利亚各地原住民过去和现在所遭受的歧视。感知到的种族主义被认为是全球原住民和非原住民健康差距的关键决定因素。我们试图确定感知到的种族主义对健康差距的影响,并将其与生活方式风险因素及其他健康决定因素(如社会经济地位)的影响进行比较。
我们合并了2011年、2012年和2014年维多利亚州人口健康调查(VPHS)的数据,以获得一个包含33,833名维多利亚州成年人的样本,其中包括387名原住民成年人。VPHS是一项具有人口代表性的横断面计算机辅助电话访谈调查,每年进行一次。使用逻辑回归分析,自我报告的健康状况不佳作为因变量,原住民身份作为主要的自变量。次要自变量包括年龄、性别、感知到的种族主义、社会经济地位和生活方式风险因素。
与非原住民维多利亚人相比,原住民维多利亚人报告健康状况不佳的可能性几乎是非原住民的两倍;比值比(OR)=1.9(95%置信区间:1.3 - 2.6)。感知到的种族主义解释了原住民和非原住民维多利亚人在自我报告健康状况方面差距的34%,其次是:吸烟(32%)、不健康体重(20%)、社会经济地位(15%)、过度饮酒(13%)和戒酒(13%)。相比之下,缺乏身体活动没有影响。感知到的种族主义和吸烟共同解释了差距的58%,而所有次要自变量共同解释了差距的82%。
感知到的种族主义可能是一个独立的健康风险因素,它解释了原住民和非原住民维多利亚人之间超过三分之一的健康差距;其影响强度与吸烟相当。澳大利亚政府“缩小差距”战略公认的失败可能部分归因于未能考虑生活方式风险因素之外的其他健康差距决定因素,即种族主义,它可能通过因果链上多个点的多种途径损害健康。