Organisation

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare

Owning Institution:
Acronym:
AIHW
Report

Health inequalities in Australia: morbidity, health behaviours, risk factors and health service use


This statistical report documents morbidity and morbidity-related inequalities by area-level socioeconomic disadvantage, equivalised household income, education and occupation among infants and children, young adults, working-aged adults and older persons for the periods 1989–90, 1995 and 2001.
Report

Mortality over the twentieth century in Australia


Analyses presented in this report show how the changes in the causes of death help to explain why we are living longer. The report describes patterns and trends in mortality over the century, highlighting the great successes but also some areas where improvements are still clearly needed.
Report

Rural, regional and remote health: mortality trends 1992-2003


This report compares changes in mortality in Australia's major cities, regional and remote areas in the period 1992-2003. Trends for Australia’s broad geographic regions are compared for a range of specific causes of death including coronary heart disease, lung cancer, cervical cancer, asthma, suicide, motor vehicle traffic accidents, diabetes and many others.
Report

National summary of the 2003 and 2004 jurisdictional reports against the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health performance indicators


This is the second national summary report on the refined set of 56 health performance indicators, designed to provide an assessment of whether the health of Indigenous people is improving and to highlight problem areas. Like many previous reports, this report draws attention to the relatively poor quality of the data, which means that comprehensive...
Report

Demand for SAAP accommodation by homeless people 2003-04


This bulletin discusses the demand for Supported Accommodation Assistance Program (SAAP) accommodation, with a focus on the groups that request accommodation – individuals on their own, individuals with children, couples with children and couples without children – because these groups have different patterns of accommodation use and varying degrees of difficulty in accessing SAAP accommodation.

Affiliated entities


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