New Report on Mortality Inequalities in Australia
Thursday, 21 August, 2014
When it comes to longevity, Australians are not equal, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) report, Mortality inequalities in Australia: 2009–2011.
The report shows that there are significant inequalities when it comes to dying early or from potentially avoidable causes.
‘Our report shows many factors affect death rates, with particular population groups more disadvantaged than others,’ said AIHW spokesperson Louise York.
‘We also found that the Australians who had the worst death rates tended to experience deaths from causes that, in many cases, can be considered to be preventable or treatable. These are often referred to as potentially avoidable deaths.’
The report shows that the death rate for males is 1.5 times as high as the rate for females. If males had the same death rate as females, there would have been 71,400 fewer male deaths over the 2009–11 period.
The death rate among Indigenous Australians was nearly twice that of non-Indigenous Australians. This was even more pronounced among Indigenous people aged 35–44 years, with a death rate five times as high as their non-Indigenous counterparts: 480 deaths per 100,000 Indigenous people aged 35–44 compared with 98 deaths per 100,000 non-Indigenous people aged 35–44.
People living in Remote and Very remote areas had death rates 1.4 times as high as those for people living in Major cities, and higher rates of death due to diabetes (3 times as high) and land transport accidents (4.7 times as high).
‘For people living in areas of lowest socioeconomic status, the death rate was 1.3 times as high as for those living in areas of the highest socioeconomic status, with death rates from diabetes and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) notably higher, at 1.8 times as high and 1.7 times as high, respectively,’ Ms York said.
Overseas-born Australian residents had lower death rates than those who were born in Australia. For example, Asian-born Australian residents had a death rate that was 36% lower than the rate for Australian-born residents.
‘Many of these patterns for 2009–11 were similar to patterns from 10 years earlier, showing that mortality inequalities are long-standing in Australia,’ Ms York said.
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