1. Aboriginal premature mortality within South Australia 1999-2006: a cross-sectional analysis of small area results
- Author
-
Heather Jury, Tony Woollacott, Robyn McDermott, Fran Baum, David Banham, Banham, David, Jury, Heather, Woollacott, Tony, McDermott, Robyn, and Baum, Frances
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Adult ,Male ,Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ,Adolescent ,Age adjustment ,Population ,Young Adult ,Life Expectancy ,South Australia ,Confidence Intervals ,Medicine ,Humans ,Mortality ,education ,Child ,Small-Area Analysis ,Disadvantage ,Retrospective Studies ,child ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,adult ,Mortality rate ,article ,Australia ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Middle Aged ,Years of potential life lost ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,confidence interval ,adolescent ,Child, Preschool ,Life expectancy ,Female ,Biostatistics ,business ,aborigine ,cluster analysis ,Demography ,Research Article - Abstract
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited., Background: This paper initially describes premature mortality by Aboriginality in South Australia during 1999 to 2006. It then examines how these outcomes vary across area level socio-economic disadvantage and geographic remoteness. Methods: The retrospective, cross-sectional analysis uses estimated resident population by sex, age and small areas based on the 2006 Census, and Unit Record mortality data. Premature mortality outcomes are measured using years of life lost (YLL). Subsequent intrastate comparisons are based on indirect sex and age adjusted YLL results. A multivariate model uses area level socio-economic disadvantage rank, geographic remoteness, and an interaction between the two variables to predict premature mortality outcomes. Results: Aboriginal people experienced 1.1% of total deaths but 2.2% of YLL and Aboriginal premature mortality rates were 2.65 times greater than the South Australian average. Premature mortality for Aboriginal and non- Aboriginal people increased significantly as area disadvantage increased. Among Aboriginal people though, a significant main effect for area remoteness was also observed, together with an interaction between disadvantage and remoteness. The synergistic effect shows the social gradient between area disadvantage and premature mortality increased as remoteness increased. Conclusions: While confirming the gap in premature mortality rates between Aboriginal South Australians and the rest of the community, the study also found a heterogeneity of outcomes within the Aboriginal community underlie this difference. The results support the existence of relationship between area level socio-economic deprivation, remoteness and premature mortality in the midst of an affluent society. The study concludes that vertically equitable resourcing according to population need is an important response to the stark mortality gap and its exacerbation by area socio-economic position and remoteness.
- Published
- 2011