4704.0 - The Health and Welfare of Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, 2005  
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Contents >> Chapter 9: Mortality >> Trends in Mortality

Analyses of trends in Indigenous mortality must be undertaken with care, because of the limited understanding of the ways in which changes in the recording of Indigenous status on death registrations have affected the recorded numbers of deaths.


Various statistical measures may be used to assess trends in mortality over time. A measure derived from comprehensive life tables - such as life expectancy at birth - is generally preferred as it takes into account age-sex-specific death rates (and any shifts in those rates) across all ages. However, the construction of such a measure depends on the availability of an accurate series of age-sex-specific population estimates together with an accurate series of age-sex-specific counts of deaths. Recent work by the ABS has improved the demographic estimates available to support trend analyses, but those estimates are still regarded as experimental. Any discussion of Indigenous mortality trends should therefore be based on a range of analytical measures to provide a broader understanding of possible trends than can be obtained from any one measure. The following sections of this chapter examine changes over time in all-cause mortality rates, infant mortality rates, age at death and cause-specific mortality rates. Each of these measures has advantages and limitations for understanding trends. These are discussed in each section.


The mortality patterns observed among Australia's Indigenous people are slow moving, and therefore trends are best detected over long periods of time. There is some evidence of more rapid progress in reducing mortality among Indigenous populations in other countries (Ring & Brown, 2003). However, the potential for analysis of long-term trends in Indigenous mortality in Australia is greatly constrained by the availability of consistently accurate data over time. When assessed in terms of consistency over time in the number of recorded deaths identified as Indigenous, South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory are each judged to have had reasonably high and reasonably stable coverage of Indigenous deaths since around 1989, although the level of coverage is different in each of those jurisdictions. To test whether the observed trends would have differed if the analyses had been based on a different time window, several different time periods were tested. While the estimated rate of changes differed, there was no change in the direction of trends or their significance. As there is a consistent time series of population estimates from 1991, data for Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory for the period 1991-2002 have been used for the analyses of Indigenous mortality in this chapter. Data for 2003 have not been used because they are still incomplete, owing to late registration of some deaths. Due to changes in the coding of cause of death in 1997, the analyses of cause-specific mortality have been based on two time periods - 1991-1996 and 1997-2002.


It would be possible to undertake analyses of trends using data for each jurisdiction separately or for all three jurisdictions combined. An analysis based on data combined from the three jurisdictions has the benefit of being based on larger numbers of observations. On balance, however, because of differences between jurisdictions - different administrative procedures that generate deaths data, different rates of Indigenous coverage, different degrees of period-to-period variation in coverage and different mortality rates - the preferred method has been to analyse mortality trends in the jurisdictions separately. Analyses undertaken during the preparation of this report were based on both separate and combined datasets. The pattern derived from the combined analyses was dominated by the larger jurisdictions, with the patterns of the smaller jurisdictions being masked. While it is possible that there are differences in mortality patterns within each jurisdiction (as well as between jurisdictions), the data currently available do not support analyses of this type.


It is important to note, however, that in 2001 the combined Indigenous populations of Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory represented 32% of the total estimated Indigenous population in Australia (14% in Western Australia, 6% in South Australia and 12% in the Northern Territory). As a consequence, any statement about the possible detection of trends in mortality in these jurisdictions can give, at best, a partial account of trends in Indigenous mortality in Australia as a whole.


A further constraint in assessing time series trends in Indigenous mortality is the relatively small size of the Indigenous population which means that, even with the high mortality rates being experienced, the absolute numbers of deaths of Indigenous people recorded each year in each jurisdiction have, for statistical purposes, been quite small. Between 1991 and 2002, annual deaths for South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory averaged 120, 369 and 407 respectively. Thus, the year-to-year fluctuations in the numbers of deaths can be quite large relative to any gradual underlying trend, and it is not meaningful to look at changes in mortality from one year to the next. Longer term changes have been analysed by examining the rate of change between the beginning and end years, and modelling trends throughout the period. A limitation of the first method is that the results are affected by the particular choice of the start and end years, whereas the trends modelling takes account of all the observations throughout the period. In this chapter, statements about the broad pace of change occurring over a number of years have been based on the fitted trends. When the trend has an estimated p-value of less than 0.05, it is characterised in subsequent text as 'significant'; when it has a p-value of between 0.05 and 0.10, it is characterised as 'of borderline significance'.


The mortality trends analyses presented in the following sections of this chapter have not used age-standardised data. Testing with both the Indigenous and the total Australian reference populations showed that age standardisation made no systematic difference to the findings regarding mortality trends. There is an ongoing debate as to whether standardisation is necessary or even appropriate for this type of analysis because trends may not be the same in all age groups. Moreover, the age composition of the Indigenous population has changed very little over the relatively short time period examined (e.g. 3% of the population in both 1991 and 2002 were aged 65 years or over in the three jurisdictions). It is therefore appropriate to use crude mortality rates as the trends would be affected very little, if at all, by changes in age composition.


While information on changes in mortality among Indigenous Australians is important in its own right, and can inform the design and evaluation of policy and interventions, it is also important to develop an understanding of how this compares with changes in mortality among the non-Indigenous population. The current data analyses do not allow a definitive answer about the relative rates of improvement for the two populations but any discussion of trends in Indigenous mortality should be read in the context of changes in non-Indigenous mortality over the same period. It is well known that most gains in non-Indigenous adult and infant mortality have occurred earlier, so that during the 1990s only small gains were observed. For example, the mortality rates of non-Indigenous infants in South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory declined from 5.0, 5.6 and 9.8 deaths per 1,000 live births in 1991 to 4.3, 3.2 and 7.8 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2002 in these jurisdictions respectively. The crude death rates for the non-Indigenous population in these three jurisdictions remained fairly stable over the same period. In 1991, crude death rates were 773, 563 and 318 deaths per 100,000 population in South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory, respectively, while in 2002 the corresponding rates were 773, 576 and 312 deaths per 100,000 population.


All-cause mortality

The results presented in this section are for recorded deaths, and assume no change in the rate at which Indigenous status is reported on death registrations. The impact of such changes in recording on the robustness of the conclusions is provided in the later section 'The sensitivity of mortality trends to changes in coverage'.


In the period 1991-2002, there were significant declines in recorded mortality rates in Western Australia for both males and females (table 9.30). For males, the fitted trend for the crude death rate implies an average yearly decline in recorded deaths of around 17 deaths per 100,000 population - this is equivalent to a reduction in the crude death rate of around one-quarter during the period of analyses. For females, the fitted trend for the crude death rate implies an average yearly decline in recorded deaths of around 15 deaths per 100,000 population - this is equivalent to a decline in the crude death rate of around one-quarter over the same period.


During the same period, the fitted trend for crude death rates in South Australia (males, females and persons) and the Northern Territory (females and persons) showed declines in recorded deaths but they were not statistically significant.


Graph 9.31 may suggest some differences between the levels of mortality between the three jurisdictions. It should be noted, however, that these differences may be partly an artefact of differences in coverage estimates. If, for example, the death rates for the most recent years were adjusted based on the ABS coverage estimate for 1999-2003 (South Australia (66%), Western Australia (72%) and the Northern Territory (95%)), then the death rates converge appreciably and the differences in death rates between jurisdictions are not statistically significant.

9.30 Indigenous crude death rates(a)(b), WA, SA and NT - 1991-2002

1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002

Western Australia
Males
797
741
791
745
746
696
732
772
633
681
614
565
Females
670
534
611
589
527
481
524
474
448
482
430
537
Persons
734
638
702
668
637
589
628
623
541
581
522
551
South Australia
Males
688
529
600
622
609
632
799
626
500
644
547
420
Females
449
455
426
469
423
422
362
445
443
473
402
409
Persons
569
493
513
546
516
526
579
535
471
558
474
415
Northern Territory
Males
854
890
842
895
849
834
808
844
907
844
877
927
Females
837
710
655
714
604
634
732
694
689
686
634
694
Persons
846
800
749
805
727
735
770
769
798
765
756
810

(a) Deaths per 100,000 population.
(b) Deaths are based on year of occurrence of death and state of usual residence.
AIHW, National Mortality Database

9.31 Indigenous crude death rates(a), WA, SA and NT - 1991-2002
Graph: Indigenous crude death rates(a), WA, SA and NT—1991–2002



Infant mortality rates

As with the 'all-cause mortality' analysis above, the results presented in this section are also for recorded deaths, and assume no change in the rate at which Indigenous status is reported on infant deaths registrations. However, Indigenous status on infant death registrations has generally been more comprehensively recorded than for deaths at older ages. See the later section 'The sensitivity of mortality trends to changes in coverage'.


There was a significant decline in recorded infant mortality in all three jurisdictions during the period 1991-2002 (table 9.32). In Western Australia, the fitted trend for the infant mortality rate implies an average yearly decline of around 0.6 deaths per 1,000 live births - this is equivalent to a reduction in the infant mortality rate of around one-third during the period of analysis. In South Australia, the fitted trend for the recorded infant mortality rate implies an average decline of around 0.9 deaths per 1,000 live births - this is equivalent to a decline in the infant mortality rate of around five-eighths during the same period. In the Northern Territory, the fitted trend line implies an average yearly decline of 0.9 deaths per 1,000 live births - this is equivalent to a decline in the infant mortality rate of two-fifths during the period 1991-2002.

9.32 Indigenous Infant mortality rates(a)(b), WA, SA and NT - 1991-2002

1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002

Western Australia(c)
20.8
22.8
16.3
20.3
22.1
18.9
19.0
17.0
16.7
13.9
16.9
15.5
South Australia
16.9
25.0
13.5
7.5
16.2
14.4
8.5
4.5
6.3
11.1
8.2
11.8
Northern Territory
25.5
28.1
25.8
21.7
17.0
24.6
23.8
21.0
28.2
17.0
16.0
13.0

(a) Deaths are based on year of occurrence of death and state of usual residence. Births are based on year of registration.
(b) Infant deaths per 1,000 live births.
(c) The average of births over 1993-1995 in Western Australia was used as the denominator for the estimates of the infant mortality rates for 1991 and 1992 to correct for errors in births recorded for 1991 and 1992.
AIHW, National Mortality Database, ABS 1999, 2004a


Quartiles of age at death

Another approach to the assessment of mortality trends, which was used in the 2003 edition of this report, is to examine changes in the age distribution of deaths. Total deaths can be partitioned into quartiles by age at death (the first quartile is the age below which 25% of all deaths occur, the median is the age below which 50% of all deaths occur, and the third quartile is the age below which 75% of all deaths occur). An analysis of this kind can reveal changes in patterns of mortality over time, such as an increase in the proportion of deaths occurring at older ages and a corresponding decrease in the proportion occurring at younger ages.


But any such changes must be interpreted with care before any inferences can be drawn regarding an improvement or deterioration in the mortality of Indigenous Australians. Moreover, the quartiles are affected by changes in the age distribution of the population resulting, for example, from changes in fertility - and therefore they support comparisons only if fertility rates remain constant over the period being analysed.


Nevertheless, the graphs at 9.33 suggest that, between 1991 to 2002, there has been some increase in the age at death for the first quartile in all jurisdictions. This is broadly consistent with other evidence such as the declines observed in infant mortality.

9.33 Quartiles of age at death for Indigenous people in WA, SA and NT - 1999-2002
Diagram: Quartiles of age at death for Indigenous people in WA, SA and NT—1999–2002



Cause-specific mortality

Another potentially informative approach to assessing mortality trends is to examine changes in the pattern of deaths, by specific causes of death. These analyses have the advantage that they may reveal trends that are disguised by the more heterogeneous aggregate of mortality figures. But the available data constrain the analyses that can be done, and caution must be exercised when interpreting changes. First, the numbers of deaths that underlie the analysis diminish when the data is disaggregated to specific causes and the finer the disaggregation, the smaller the numbers and the larger the fluctuations relative to any underlying trend. The analyses undertaken for this report have been confined to five main causes of death - neoplasms; endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases; diseases of the circulatory system; diseases of the respiratory system; and external causes. Second, there have been changes in the classification and coding of causes of death over the period of the analyses from ICD-9 (1991 to 1996) to ICD-10 (1997 to 2002), and this affects the comparability of the data. Therefore, the analyses reported here have been done for two time periods - 1991-1996 and 1997-2002. Third, when analysing five causes of death for three jurisdictions, for three population groups (persons, males and females) and for two periods, some individually statistically significant changes may arise by chance - so attention should be paid to those causes that show some consistency of pattern, not to individual differences or changes.


As for the analysis of all-cause mortality, the results presented in this section are for recorded deaths, and assume no change in the rate at which Indigenous status is reported on deaths registrations, including no changes in rates of recording Indigenous status by specific causes of death. The impact of such changes in recording on the robustness of the conclusions is provided in the later section 'The sensitivity of mortality trends to changes in coverage'.


Of the five causes examined, only diseases of the circulatory system showed somewhat consistent significant trends in recorded mortality.


In Western Australia, recorded mortality from diseases of the circulatory system showed declines during both time periods studied (tables 9.34 and 9.35). During 1991-1996, there was a decline of borderline significance for persons (with the fitted trend implying that the mortality rate at the end of the period was around three-quarters the rate at the beginning); this reflected a significant decline for females (to around three-fifths the mortality rate at the beginning of the period) and a smaller decline, not attaining statistical significance, for males.

9.34 Indigenous crude death rates, circulatory diseases(a)(b), Western Australia - 1991-1996

1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996

Western Australia
Females
221
215
163
191
138
131
Persons
240
203
184
220
173
164

(a) Deaths per 100,000 population.
(b) Deaths are based on year of occurrence of death and state of usual residence.
AIHW National Mortality Database


During 1997-2002, there was a significant decline for persons in Western Australia (to around three-quarters the mortality rate at the beginning of the period). Broadly equivalent declines were implied by the fitted trends for males (of borderline significance) and for females (not attaining statistical significance).


In South Australia, recorded mortality from diseases of the circulatory system showed declines during the second period (1997-2002). The fitted trends implied significant declines for persons and males (to around three-quarters and two-fifths the mortality rates at the beginning of the period, respectively).


In the Northern Territory too, recorded mortality from diseases of the circulatory system showed declines during the second period (1997-2002). The fitted trend implied a decline of borderline significance for persons to four-fifths the mortality rate at the beginning of the period; the recorded decline for males was significant, and that for females was not significant.

9.35 Indigenous crude death rates, circulatory diseases (a)(b), WA, SA and NT - 1997-2002

1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002

Western Australia
Males
220
209
170
142
182
155
Persons
173
172
150
150
133
130
South Australia
Males
195
184
164
145
111
86
Persons
152
153
146
131
121
115
Northern Territory
Males
274
274
237
247
228
228
Persons
249
229
199
208
181
206

(a) Deaths per 100,000 population.
(b) Deaths are based on year of occurrence of death and state of usual residence.
AIHW, National Mortality Database


The sensitivity of mortality trends to changes in coverage

When analysing trends in recorded Indigenous mortality, it is important to try to distinguish changes that arise because of real changes in mortality from those that arise because of changes in the reporting of Indigenous status on deaths registrations. But only broad, indicative estimates of changes in coverage are available, so it is not possible to definitively dissect observed changes in recorded mortality into the real and reporting effects.


In the absence of such a definitive dissection, the fitted trends discussed earlier in this chapter have been examined for their sensitivity to changes in Indigenous coverage. If those trends were to persist under a range of plausible assumptions regarding coverage, that would add to the confidence that the trends reflect some real alteration in mortality and are not just artefacts of changes in coverage.


Three scenarios for coverage were posed - constant coverage, increasing coverage and decreasing coverage.

  • Under the constant coverage scenario, the numbers of deaths for the entire period under study were adjusted using coverage estimates derived from the most recent ABS analyses (relating to the period 1999-2003).
  • Under the increasing coverage scenario, deaths were adjusted by linearly increasing the coverage through the period under study - from 64% in 1991 to 71% in 2002 for Western Australia; from 60% to 66% for South Australia; and from 90% to 95% for the Northern Territory.
  • Under the decreasing coverage scenario, deaths were adjusted by linearly decreasing the coverage - from 80% in 1991 to 73% for Western Australia; from 72% to 67% for South Australia; and from 100% to 95% for the Northern Territory.

The adjustments in the latter two scenarios were based on judgments about the largest plausible shifts in coverage during the decade; of course, if any actual shift in coverage were more extreme than has been posed under these scenarios, then the observed trends in mortality might not persist. For all three scenarios, the population figures (used as denominators in the calculation of mortality rates) were re-estimated to reflect the altered number of deaths implied by each scenario.


The declines in all-cause mortality for males and persons in Western Australia during the period 1991-2002 remained significant under all three scenarios. For females, the significant decline became of borderline significance under the decreasing coverage scenario.


The declines in infant mortality during 1991-2002 in Western Australia and the Northern Territory remained significant under all three scenarios. For South Australia, the significant decline became of borderline significance under the decreasing coverage scenario.


The declines in mortality from diseases of the circulatory system - during 1991-96, for females in Western Australia; and during 1997-2002, for persons in Western Australia, for males and persons in South Australia, and for males in the Northern Territory - remained significant under all three scenarios.


Comparisons with other research

Condon et al. (2004b) have undertaken one of the most thorough analyses of Indigenous mortality in Australia. This work examined mortality for the Northern Territory only, but over a much longer period (1967-2000) than has been used in this Chapter.


Condon et al. (2004b) reported that Indigenous all-cause mortality rates in the Northern Territory declined overall and for all age groups that they examined. Declines were greater for females than males, and greater in younger and older age groups than in the early and middle adult years (25-64 years). They based their analyses on three broad disease groups - 'communicable diseases' (defined to also include maternal, perinatal and nutritional conditions), 'non-communicable diseases' and injuries. As to cause-specific mortality, they reported declines for two disease groups - communicable diseases and injury - but no statistically significant trend for non-communicable diseases.


The analyses described by Condon et al. (2004b) have been replicated using the mortality data on which this chapter is based. The replicated analyses differ from Condon et al. in several ways - they are based on three jurisdictions (adding Western Australia and South Australia to the Northern Territory); the data refer to a much shorter time period (1991-2002); and using all ages for overall and cause-specific mortality (whereas Condon et al. used ages five years and over).


Mortality trends have been examined for Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory and for the same age groupings as were reported by Condon et al. The trends that were statistically significant are listed below:

  • For Western Australia during 1991-2002, there were significant declines in Indigenous mortality rates in some age groupings. For persons, there were declines for ages 0-4 years, 45-64 years and 65 years and over. For males, there were declines for ages 0-4 years and 45-64 years. For females, there were declines for ages 45-64 years and 65 years and over.
  • For South Australia, there was a decline for persons aged 45-64 years.
  • For the Northern Territory, there were declines in age-specific mortality for both persons and for females aged 45-64 years.

Trends in crude death rates have also been examined using the same broad cause-of-death groups as are reported by Condon et al. (2004b). Some of the results of these analyses are shown in table 9.36. In summary, the only statistically significant trends were:
  • For Western Australia during 1991-2002, there were significant declines among persons, males and females for death from non-communicable diseases. There were also significant declines among males for death from communicable diseases. There were no significant trends for injury.
  • For South Australia, there was one significant trend - a decline among males for death from communicable diseases.
  • For the Northern Territory, there were significant declines for persons, males and females for death from communicable diseases. There was a significant increase for males for death from non-communicable diseases. For injury, there were no significant trends.

In summary, there is some agreement between the results of the shorter-period, three-jurisdiction analyses discussed above and those reported by Condon et al. (2004b) regarding the Northern Territory. It is not surprising that the analyses by Condon et al. (2004b), spanning a much longer time period back to the 1960s, showed a larger number of significant trends. With a much longer period of data for the analyses, there is greater chance for any systematic movement in mortality rates to dominate or emerge from the variable year-to-year data. There may also be real differences in the mortality trends experienced in the three jurisdictions studied. It may also be that the differing coverage rates in the three jurisdictions studied (with much higher coverage in the Northern Territory) mask similarities and differences in Indigenous mortality across these jurisdictions.

9.36 Indigenous crude death rates, cause-specific mortality(a)(b), WA, SA and NT - 1991-2002

1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002

Communicable, maternal, perinatal and nutritional conditions

Western Australia
Males
105
81
107
49
92
87
56
48
41
62
61
66
South Australia
Males
78
104
74
36
35
35
68
25
33
32
56
16
Northern Territory
Males
145
171
106
148
86
115
64
100
120
68
98
52
Females
137
118
66
121
99
77
72
78
81
83
49
59
Persons
141
145
86
135
92
96
68
89
100
75
74
55

Non-communicable diseases

Western Australia
Males
537
477
483
511
465
442
541
479
407
433
411
392
Females
502
415
474
441
382
400
369
368
344
355
324
359
Persons
520
446
479
476
424
421
455
423
375
394
367
375
Northern Territory
Males
521
510
499
587
587
517
597
552
608
583
576
612

(a) Deaths per 100,000 population.
(b) Deaths are based on year of occurrence of death and state of usual residence.
AIHW, National Mortality Database

9.37 Mortality trends in New South Wales and Queensland
Diagram: Mortality trends in New South Wales and Queensland





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