Health‐Poverty Inequality in Australia from 2001 to 2018

Author:

Jun Dajung1ORCID,Sutton Matt2

Affiliation:

1. College of Business Husson University Bangor Maine USA

2. Health Organisation, Policy & Economics, School of Health Sciences The University of Manchester Manchester UK

Abstract

AbstractWhile established measures gauge poverty across diverse aspects of life, a definitive metric for health poverty in Australia remains absent. This study examines health poverty trends, identifying priorities for interventions to improve overall population health. We define health poverty as the state of falling below a specified minimum threshold in any critical health aspect, encompassing physical function, role function, social function, pain, mental health and vitality. Additionally, mortality (i.e., dying within 1 year) is integrated into the health poverty measure. The percentage of the overall adult population grappling with health poverty was 42 percent in 2001, falling to 37 percent in 2009 before ascending to 43 percent in 2018. The level of health poverty was more prevalent among women, older age groups and Indigenous individuals than in men, younger age groups or non‐Indigenous people, respectively. By meticulously monitoring health poverty trends across various dimensions, this study unveils the sociodemographic group susceptible to health poverty and quantifies its impact on overall population well‐being. The investigation highlights poor role functioning and vitality deficiency as pivotal components contributing to health poverty.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference42 articles.

1. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2019)Trends in hospitalised injury due to falls in older people 2007–08 to 2016–17. Injury research and statistics series no. 126. Cat. No. INJCAT 206. Canberra: AIHW.

2. Association of primary care physician supply with population mortality in the United States, 2005‐2015;Basu S.;JAMA Internal Medicine,2019

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