Indigenous and tribal peoples' health (The Lancet–Lowitja Institute Global Collaboration): a population study

Background International studies of the health of Indigenous and tribal peoples provide important public health insights. Reliable data are required for the development of policy and health services. Previous studies document poorer outcomes for Indigenous peoples compared with benchmark populations...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Lancet
Main Authors: Anderson, Ian, Robson, Bridget, Connolly, Michele, Al-Yaman, Fadwa, Bjertness, Espen, King, Alexandra, Tynan, Michael, Madden, Richard, Bang, Abhay, Coimbra, Carlos, Pesantes, María Amalia, Amigo, Hugo, Andronov, Sergei, Armien, Blas, Ayala Obando, Daniel, Axelsson, Per, Bhatti, Zaid Shakoor, Bhutta, Zulfi qar Ahmed, Bjerregaard, Peter, Bjertness, Marius B., Briceño León, Roberto, Broderstad, Ann Ragnhild, Bustos, Patricia, Chongsuvivatwong, Virasakdi, Chu, Jiayou, Deji, Gouda, Jitendra, Harikumar, Rachakulla, Htay, Thein Thein, Htet, Aung Soe, Izugbara, Chimaraoke, Kamaka, Martina, King, Malcolm, Kodavanti, Mallikharjuna Rao, Lara, Macarena, Laxmaiah, Avula, Lema, Claudia, León Taborda, Ana María, Liabsuetrakul, Tippawan, Lobanov, Andrey, Melhus, Marita, Meshram, Indrapal, Miranda, J. Jaime, Mu, Thet Thet, Nagalla, Balkrishna, Nimmathota, Arlappa, Popov, Andrey Ivanovich, Peñuela Poveda, Ana María, Ram, Faujdar, Reich, Hannah
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(16)00345-7
https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/160142
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Summary:Background International studies of the health of Indigenous and tribal peoples provide important public health insights. Reliable data are required for the development of policy and health services. Previous studies document poorer outcomes for Indigenous peoples compared with benchmark populations, but have been restricted in their coverage of countries or the range of health indicators. Our objective is to describe the health and social status of Indigenous and tribal peoples relative to benchmark populations from a sample of countries. Methods Collaborators with expertise in Indigenous health data systems were identified for each country. Data were obtained for population, life expectancy at birth, infant mortality, low and high birthweight, maternal mortality, nutritional status, educational attainment, and economic status. Data sources consisted of governmental data, data from non-governmental organisations such as UNICEF, and other research. Absolute and relative differences were calculated. Findings Our data (23 countries, 28 populations) provide evidence of poorer health and social outcomes for Indigenous peoples than for non-Indigenous populations. However, this is not uniformly the case, and the size of the rate difference varies. We document poorer outcomes for Indigenous populations for: life expectancy at birth for 16 of 18 populations with a difference greater than 1 year in 15 populations; infant mortality rate for 18 of 19 populations with a rate difference greater than one per 1000 livebirths in 16 populations; maternal mortality in ten populations; low birthweight with the rate difference greater than 2% in three populations; high birthweight with the rate difference greater than 2% in one population; child malnutrition for ten of 16 populations with a difference greater than 10% in five populations; child obesity for eight of 12 populations with a difference greater than 5% in four populations; adult obesity for seven of 13 populations with a difference greater than 10% in four populations; ...