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Journal of the Australian Health Promotion Association
EDITORIAL

Health promotion success in Australia and a note of warning

Colin Binns A , Peter Howat A and Jonine Jancey A B
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A School of Public Health, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.

B Corresponding author. Email: j.jancey@curtin.edu.au

Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25(3) 157-159 https://doi.org/10.1071/HEv25n3_ED
Published: 8 December 2014

Recently the 2013 data on deaths in Australia have been released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).1 Australia has joined the top four countries in the Life Expectancy league tables, a group in which both male and female life expectancies are greater than 80 years. The four countries at the top are Japan, Iceland, Switzerland and now Australia. Women in Australia crossed the 80-year barrier in 1990, but it was not until 2013 that Australian men reached the same milestone. Since then, the rate of increase in women has slowed and the gap in life expectancies between the sexes has narrowed from 7.1 years in 1980 to 6.2 years in 1990, 5 years in 2003 and to 4.1 years in 2013. The life expectancy of Indigenous Australians has increased but the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians has narrowed only slightly (see Table 1) and is still ~10 years.

With such observational data, there can only be discussion about the contributing factors. However, the activities of health promotion and public health can take at least some – and probably the major proportion – of the credit. Smoking rates are continuing to fall. Immunisation protects against a wide range of diseases. Past improvements in infant nutrition (the first 1000 days), including increasing breastfeeding rates, are reaping their rewards as the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) hypothesis becomes more than just a theory and chronic disease rates (age adjusted) are falling. The improvements in awareness of the importance of physical activity, nutrition and other lifestyle factors to health are significant, despite the black marks of increasing obesity and type II diabetes. The 2014 Global Burden of Diseases Project has confirmed the importance of nutrition and other modifiable risk factors in reducing healthy life expectancy.2 Currently, in Australia and most developed countries, ~40% of the total risk factor burden is due to nutrition-related risk factors.

The main risk factors for Australia are dietary risks (10.5%), high body–mass index (BMI) (8.5%), smoking (8.3%) and high blood pressure (7.1%). The total burden of nutrition-related risk factors is 43% (see Fig. 1).2


Fig. 1.  Burden of disease attributable to 15 leading risk factors in 2010, expressed as a percentage of Australian DALYs.2
Click to zoom

Recent data from the United States show an improvement in health outcomes in a short period resulting from improved access to health care and disease prevention programs.3 The ABS (2014) data on life expectancies show some interesting trends between the Australian states. Can it be that Australia is conducting a quasi-experiment on health outcomes by reducing health promotion services in some states? Fig. 2 shows a comparison of life expectancy in females in Queensland and Western Australia. There have been widespread cutbacks in health promotion and public health services in Queensland compared with Western Australia.

Is the widening gap in life expectancy between these states a reflection of what can be expected when health promotion is dismantled? It seems that in Australia, governments are increasingly prepared to gamble with the health of the public by reducing health promotion activities. It is too soon to be sure whether the cutbacks in health promotion are the cause. However, these data serve as a warning for governments that cutbacks may be rapidly reflected in poorer health outcomes – even before the next election.


And another survey

The results of the Second Australian Study of Health and Relationships have just been released in a special issue of Sexual Health.4 This survey has confirmed further successes for health promotion in Australia. For many years, there was opposition to sexual health education in our schools. However, the results of the survey confirm that Australians are not having sex at an earlier age compared with a decade ago. In addition, a high proportion of our population are using condoms for protection against sexually transmissible infections.5 Australia has a good record of initiating sexual health education programs.6 The survey results confirm what health promotion experts have known for a long time: that health promotion programs do not result in earlier or riskier experimentation with sexual activity. In fact, sexual health in Australia appears to be improving, with one or two exceptions. This study confirms the importance of continuing health promotion programs on human relationships for the young people of Australia.


Success and a note of caution

There continues to be improvements in life expectancy in Australia, which is the best overall index of health, as well as improvements in sexual health. These improvements can be attributed, at least in part, to health promotion services in Australia. However, a note of caution needs to be added that the recent cutbacks to health promotion, and further proposed cuts in health promotion and prevention services, may rapidly reverse some of these gains. In this era of small government and budget cuts to all community services, the overall population benefit of health promotion appears to be neglected. This journal welcomes studies that demonstrate the efficiency and efficacy of health promotion in improving the health and well being of all Australians.


Fig. 2.  Female life expectancies in Queensland and Western Australia.1
F2


Table 1.  Life expectancy in Australia 2005–20121
Click to zoom



References

[1]  Australian Bureau of Statistics. Deaths, Australia, 2013, publication 3302.0. Canberra, ACT: Australian Bureau of Statistics; 2014.

[2]  Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. Australia Country Profile. 2014. Available from https://www.healthdata.org/sites/default/files/files/country_profiles/GBD/ihme_gbd_country_report_australia.pdf [Verified 24 November 2014].

[3]  Sommers BD, Long SK, Baicker K (2014) Changes in mortality after Massachusetts health care reform: a quasi-experimental study. Ann Intern Med 160, 585–93.
Changes in mortality after Massachusetts health care reform: a quasi-experimental study.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

[4]  Richters J, Badcock PB, Simpson JM, Shellard D, Rissel C, de Visser RO, et al (2014) Design and methods of the Second Australian Study of Health and Relationships. Sex Health 11, 383–96.
Design and methods of the Second Australian Study of Health and Relationships.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

[5]  de Visser RO, Badcock PB, Rissel C, Richters J, Smith AM, Grulich AE, et al (2014) Safer sex and condom use: findings from the Second Australian Study of Health and Relationships. Sex Health 11, 495–504.
Safer sex and condom use: findings from the Second Australian Study of Health and Relationships.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

[6]  Brown G, O’Donnell D, Crooks L, Lake R (2014) Mobilisation, politics, investment and constant adaptation: lessons from the Australian health-promotion response to HIV. Health Promot J Austr 25, 41
Mobilisation, politics, investment and constant adaptation: lessons from the Australian health-promotion response to HIV.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |