Indigenous Australians also fare much worse than non-indigenous on
almost every health score, according to Australia's Health 2016
report, complied by the government's Australian Institute of Health
and Welfare and published every two years.
The total number of deaths from cancer was 44,100 in 2013, the
institute said, for the first time surpassing the number of deaths
from cardiovascular disease, including heart attacks and stroke.
Lung cancer is Australia's most common fatal cancer.
"People are now living long enough to get cancer in greater
numbers," said Professor Lisa Horvath, director of research at the
Chris O'Brien Lifehouse cancer hospital in Sydney.
"Age is the biggest risk factor, apart from smoking, for getting
cancer."
Globally, cardiovascular diseases are a bigger killer than cancer,
according to the World Health Organization.
Australia is doing better than Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development averages for life expectancy and infant
mortality.
But on both counts, the figures for indigenous Australians lag badly
behind developed-world averages.
While the gap is narrowing, there remains a profound disparity in
health scores between Aborigines, who comprise three percent of
Australia's population, and their non-indigenous counterparts.
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"What the data shows is just how important it is to bring about
faster changes," said Ian Ring, a public health physician and
epidemiologist at the University of Wollongong, south of Sydney.
"Housing, education and poverty do have a very great effect on
health and in all of those things there's still a long way to go
until Aboriginal people can enjoy the same health as the rest of the
population."
Indigenous infant mortality rates, a key indicator of the general
health of a population, fell 9 percent compared with figures in the
previous report.
But at 6 deaths per 1,000 live births, they remain much higher than
the non-indigenous infant mortality rate of 3.4 deaths per 1,000
live births.
Growth in health expenditure ran at 3.1 percent in 2012-13, well
below the decade's average of 5 percent.
(Reporting by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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