Yusuf Farhat, Leeder Stephen, Dickson Michelle, de Meyrick Julian
Leeder Centre for Health Policy, Economics and Data, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Department of Management, Macquarie Business School, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
J Biosoc Sci. 2025 Jul;57(4):449-459. doi: 10.1017/S0021932025000276. Epub 2025 May 30.
For the first time, a question relating to certain long-term health conditions was asked in the 2021 Australian population census. The conditions included arthritis, asthma, cancer (including remission), dementia (including Alzheimer's), diabetes (excluding gestational diabetes), heart disease (including heart attack or angina), kidney disease, lung condition (including COPD or emphysema), mental health condition (including depression or anxiety), and stroke. Respondents could indicate either none or any number of these conditions. In this paper, the data on these conditions have been analysed to compare the self-reported prevalence of diseases among the 23.4 million Australians who responded to this question (median age 39 years), of whom 3.2% were Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples (median age 24 years). Standardised Morbidity Ratios for each disease were calculated for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples by using the relevant age-disease specific morbidity rates for the total population as the 'standard'. Findings of this research revealed that the prevalence of diseases was much higher among the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples compared to the total population. The only exception was cancer, where the rates for the two groups were not much different. Gaps in prevalence of diseases in the two groups generally increased with age. The higher rates among the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples emphasise the need for continued action on health equity and the development of more nuanced and focused initiatives to reduce the gaps between the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples the total population of Australia. Findings in this paper were consistent with similar studies (albeit largely surveys) on health of the Indigenous peoples in Canada and the Maoris in New Zealand.
2021年澳大利亚人口普查首次询问了与某些长期健康状况相关的问题。这些状况包括关节炎、哮喘、癌症(包括缓解期)、痴呆症(包括阿尔茨海默病)、糖尿病(不包括妊娠期糖尿病)、心脏病(包括心脏病发作或心绞痛)、肾病、肺部疾病(包括慢性阻塞性肺疾病或肺气肿)、心理健康状况(包括抑郁症或焦虑症)以及中风。受访者可以表明没有这些状况或有任意数量的这些状况。在本文中,对这些状况的数据进行了分析,以比较在回答了这个问题的2340万澳大利亚人(中位年龄39岁)中自我报告的疾病患病率,其中3.2%是原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民(中位年龄24岁)。通过将总人口中相关的年龄 - 疾病特定发病率作为“标准”,计算了原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民每种疾病的标准化发病率。这项研究的结果显示,与总人口相比,原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民中疾病的患病率要高得多。唯一的例外是癌症,两组的发病率没有太大差异。两组疾病患病率的差距通常随着年龄的增长而增大。原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民中较高的发病率强调了继续采取行动促进健康公平以及制定更细致、更有针对性的举措以缩小原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民与澳大利亚总人口之间差距的必要性。本文的研究结果与加拿大原住民和新西兰毛利人健康状况的类似研究(尽管大多是调查)一致。