Health and health care in Australian immigration detention: a comparison between onshore and offshore data

Author:

Kalocsányiová Erika,Essex Ryan

Abstract

Purpose This study aims to compare the impact of Australian onshore and offshore immigration detention centres (IDCs) on detainees’ health and health-care events. Design/methodology/approach It uses data extracted from the Australian Government’s quarterly health reports from 2014 to 2017. These reports contain a range of data about the health and well-being of detainees, including complaints/presenting symptoms and number of appointments and hospitalisations. To compare onshore and offshore data sets, the authors calculated the rate of health events per quarter against the estimated quarterly onshore and offshore detention population. They ran a series of two-proportion z-tests for each matched quarter to calculate median z- and p-values for all quarters. These were used as an indicator as to whether the observed differences between onshore and offshore events were statistically significant. Findings The results suggest that adults detained onshore and offshore have substantial health needs, however, almost all rates were far higher in offshore detention, with people more likely to raise a health-related complaint, access health services and be prescribed medications, often at two to three times the rate of those onshore. Originality/value This paper adds to a modest body of literature that explains the health of people detained in Australian IDCs. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first paper to explore health service utilisation and a range of other variables found in the Australian Government’s quarterly health reports. These findings bolster the evidence which suggests that detention, and particularly offshore detention is particularly harmful to health.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science,Health (social science)

Reference23 articles.

1. Offshore detention: cross-sectional analysis of the health of children and young people seeking asylum in Australia;Archives of Disease in Childhood,2023

2. Amnesty International (2016), “Island of despair: Australia’s ‘processing’ of refugees on Nauru”, available at: www.amnesty.org/en/documents/asa12/4934/2016/en/ (accessed 12 March 2023).

3. Australian Human Rights Commission (2004), “Australia’s immigration detention policy and practice”, available at: https://humanrights.gov.au/our-work/projects/6-australias-immigration-detention-policy-and-practice (accessed 01 September 2023).

4. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2020), “Medicare-subsidised mental health-specific services”, available at: www.aihw.gov.au/getmedia/78aad118-149e-49e3-bacf-6be3cf8d1734/Medicare-subsidised-mental-health-related-services-2019-20.pdf (accessed 14 September 2023).

5. de Boer, R. (2013), “Health care for asylum seekers on Nauru and Manus island”, available at: https://apo.org.au/sites/default/files/resource-files/2013-06/apo-nid34717.pdf (accessed 14 September 2023).

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