Socioeconomic outcome area 14

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people enjoy high levels of social and emotional wellbeing

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Target 14

Significant and sustained reduction in suicide of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people towards zero.

Dashboard snapshot: The data below are the most recent at the time of preparing the July 2023 report. Please go to the dashboard to access the current data.

In 2021, the suicide age-standardised rate for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was 27.1 per 100 000 people (for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT combined) (figure CtG14.1).

This is below the rate in the previous two years but above the baseline in 2018 (25.1 per 100 000 people).

There is no specified trajectory or expected timeline for achieving zero suicide. This is because there is no acceptable rate of suicide – today or at any other time. A trajectory of a 75 per cent reduction in the suicide rate is presented here. This trajectory was one of four (20 per cent, 25 per cent, 50 per cent and 75 per cent) developed through National Agreement processes and is presented here as it the most ambitious of the target trajectories.

Nationally, based on progress from the baseline, the target is worsening. However, this assessment should be used with caution as it is based on a limited number of data points. Please see the How to interpret the data page for more information.

Figure CtG14.1 shows the mortality due to suicide, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people age-standardised rate per 100 000 population, Total (New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and the Northen Territory). More details can be found within the text near this image.

Disaggregations

By state and territory

For the five years 2017-2021, after adjusting for differences in population age structures, the suicide rate for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was between 20.8 per 100 000 (NSW) and 34.7 per 100 000 (WA) population across the five jurisdictions for which data were available (figure CtG14.2).

Figure CtG14.2 shows Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Mortality due to suicide, age-standardised rate per 100 000 population, by jurisdiction, by year. More details can be found within the text near this image.
Data in figure CtG14.2 (rate (AS))
YearNSWQldWASANT
2009-201311.020.734.420.429.1
2010-201410.821.138.124.631.6
2011-201512.422.639.425.828.1
2012-201614.122.839.821.626.2
2013-201715.724.438.025.325.6
2014-201817.524.238.221.225.9
2015-201919.526.634.620.425.6
2016-202019.828.033.320.929.0
2017-202120.828.134.724.030.9

By sex

In 2021, after adjusting for differences in population age structures, the suicide rate for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander males for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT combined was 2.4 times the rate for females (figure CtG14.3).

Figure CtG14.3 shows Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Mortality due to suicide, age-standardised rate per 100 000 population, Total (New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory), by sex, by year. More details can be found within the text near this image.
Data in figure CtG14.3 (rate (AS))
Sex2009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021
Males25.833.431.726.933.732.837.036.437.638.640.442.938.6
Females7.88.113.811.212.112.412.411.211.211.715.113.416.1

By age group

For the period 2017–2021, for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT combined, the suicide rates for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 18–24 years, 25–34 years and 35–44 years (50.5, 47.5 and 47.7 per 100 000 population respectively) were more than twice the rates for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 45 years or over and 5–17 years (18.5 and 7.4 per 100 000 population respectively) (figure CtG14.4).

Figure CtG14.4 shows Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Mortality due to suicide, rate per 100 000 population, Total (New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory), by age group, by 5-year aggregate. More details can be found within the text near this image.
Data in figure CtG14.4 (rate)
Age2014-20182015-20192016-20202017-2021
5-17 years old8.38.17.77.4
18-24 years old46.048.951.650.5
25-34 years old47.547.646.447.5
35-44 years old39.241.545.047.7
45+ years old15.316.817.718.5

By sex, by age group

Data on suicide death rates, by Indigenous status, by sex, by age group are available in table CtG14A.6.

By remoteness area

For the period 2017–2021, the Australian suicide rates for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were higher in remote and very remote areas (29.9 per 100 000 population) compared to regional areas and major cities (25.4 and 23.1 per 100 000 population respectively) (figure CtG14.5).

(Suicide rates are available for national remoteness areas only. Data on the number of suicides (5-year aggregates), by state and territory, by remoteness area are available in table CtG14A.8.)

Figure CtG14.5 shows Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Mortality due to suicide, age-standardised rate per 100 000 population, Australia, by remoteness area, by 5-year aggregate. More details can be found within the text near this image.
Data in figure CtG14.5 (rate (AS))
Remoteness2014-20182015-20192016-20202017-2021
Major cities20.521.422.323.1
Inner and outer regional21.223.124.025.4
Remote and very remote28.528.329.529.9

By sex, by remoteness area

Data on suicide death rates, by Indigenous status, by sex, by remoteness area are available in table CtG14A.9.

Target data specifications

Target 14: Significant and sustained reduction in suicide

Outcome:

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people enjoy high levels of social and emotional wellbeing.

Target:

A significant and sustained reduction in suicide of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people towards zero.

There is no specified trajectory or expected timeline for achieving zero suicide. A trajectory of a 75 per cent reduction in the suicide rate is presented here as it is the most ambitious of the four target trajectories (20 per cent, 25 per cent, 50 per cent and 75 per cent) developed through National Agreement processes.

Indicator:

Suicide death rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

Measure:

The measure is defined as:

Numerator — number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander suicide deaths

Denominator — number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the population

and is presented as an age-standardised rate per 100 000 people.

Target established:

National Agreement on Closing the Gap July 2020

Latest dashboard update:

8 March 2023

Indicator type:

Target

Interpretation of change:

A low or decreasing rate is desirable.

Data source(s):

Name (numerator): Causes of Death, Australia

Frequency: Annual (revised data for 2018 and 2019 included in the March 2023 Dashboard update – see Data quality considerations for further information)

Name (denominator): Estimates and Projections for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population

Frequency: Annual (revised data for 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2021 included in the March 2023 Dashboard update)

Documentation (links): https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/health/causes-death/causes-death-australia/

https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-peoples/estimates-and-projections-aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-australians

Data provider:

Provider name: Australian Bureau of Statistics

Provider area: Causes of Death

Baseline year:

2018

Latest reporting period

2021

Target year:

2031

Disaggregations:

Total (includes NSW, Qld, WA, SA and the NT), Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, single years

State and territory (NSW, Qld, WA, SA and the NT only) and total (5 jurisdictions combined), by Indigenous status, 5-year aggregates

Total (includes NSW, Qld, WA, SA and the NT), by Indigenous status, single years

State and territory (NSW, Qld, WA, SA and the NT) and total (includes NSW, Qld, WA, SA and the NT ), by Indigenous status by sex, 5-year aggregates

State and territory (NSW, Qld, WA, SA and the NT) and total (includes NSW, Qld, WA, SA and the NT), by Indigenous status, by age group, 5-year aggregates

Suicide death rate, total (includes NSW, Qld, WA, SA and the NT), by age group, by Indigenous status, by sex, 5-year aggregates

Suicide death rate, Australia, by remoteness area, by Indigenous status, 5-year aggregates

Suicide deaths, state and territory, by remoteness area, 5-year aggregates

Suicide death rate, Australia, by remoteness area, by Indigenous status, by sex, 5-year aggregates

Suicide deaths, Australia, by remoteness area, by Indigenous status, by sex, 5-year aggregates

Computation:

Numerator divided by Denominator multiplied by 100 000

Counting rules

Numerator:

  • Deaths from intentional self-harm: includes ICD-10 codes X60-X84 and Y87.0.
  • Deaths are based on date of registration (not date of occurrence).
  • Deaths where the Indigenous status of the person is unknown or not stated are not included.
  • Rates for single year use single year deaths data. Rates for 5 years combined use the average of 5 years of deaths data.

Denominator:

Estimated population as at 30 June:

  • The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population is calculated from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population estimates and projections (series B).
  • The non-Indigenous population is calculated by subtracting the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population from the total population.
  • Rates for single year use single year population data. Rates for 5 years combined use the mid-point of 5 years of population data.

Age-standardised rate:

Age-standardised rates are calculated using the direct method using 5-year age groups from 0–4 to 75 years and over, with the Australian standard population as at 30 June 2001. For estimates by remoteness area, rates are calculated using 5-year age groups from 0–4 to 65 years and over. See the How to interpret data page for further information.

Disaggregations:

Causes of death statistics by jurisdiction and remoteness are based on usual residence of the deceased. Deaths of persons usually resident overseas which occur in Australia are included in the state/territory in which their death was registered.

Sex relates to biological sexual characteristics. Where the sex of the deceased has not been specified as male or female the death is excluded from the analysis by sex.

Remoteness area is classified according to the ABS 2016 Australian Statistical Geography Standard (ASGS) using SA1 as the building block. Data exclude deaths where residence was categorised as ‘migratory’, ‘no known usual residence’, ‘overseas’, or it was not sufficient to identify the geographic area and assign remoteness area.

Supporting calculations

Suicide death numbers.

Data quality considerations:

Reporting of rates is only for those jurisdictions which have adequate levels of Indigenous identification (NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT in line with national reporting guidelines), including the disaggregations. The exception is the data by remoteness which includes all jurisdictions (rather than the 5 jurisdictions in the target indicator) as data on the Estimated Resident Population (ERP) by remoteness are not available by jurisdiction.

For disaggregated data, single-year estimates are subject to volatility due to small numbers. Therefore, 5-year aggregates are provided for point-in-time comparisons for jurisdictions and across age groups and remoteness areas.

All causes of death data from 2006 onward are subject to a revisions process. Once data for a reference year are 'final', they are no longer revised. Data presented here are final for 2018 and earlier years, at the revised stage for 2019 and preliminary for 2020 and 2021. See the Data quality section of the methodology in the Causes of Death, Australia, 2021 publication available here: www.abs.gov.au/methodologies/causes-death-australia-methodology/2021#data-quality

Coronial cases are more likely to be affected by a lag in registration time, especially those which are due to external causes, including suicide. Due to small numbers these lagged coroner-referred registrations can create large yearly variation in some causes of deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander persons. Caution should be taken when making year to year analysis.

Caution should be taken when interpreting figures relating to intentional self-harm and when conducting time series analysis (due to changes in Indigenous identification and causes of death coding processes over time). See Causes of Death, Australia methodology (www.abs.gov.au/methodologies/causes-death-australia-methodology).

Data for Indigenous status are influenced by the quality of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification of people in the death registration process, which is likely to differ across jurisdictions and over time. In 2021, there were 1106 deaths registered in Australia for whom Indigenous status was not stated, representing 0.6 per cent of all deaths registered.

Queensland deaths for 2010 have been adjusted to minimise the impact of a number of late registrations received in that year on mortality indicators.

Some age-standardised rates are unreliable due to small numbers of deaths over the reference period. This can result in greater volatility of rates.

From 2016, reference year deaths with not stated age have not been prorated.

Future reporting:

Additional disaggregations required for future reporting:

  • All states/territories (currently only available for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT)
  • Disability
  • Socioeconomic status of the locality.

Supporting indicators

Driver

  • Non-fatal hospitalisations for intentional self-harm
  • Intentional self-harm mortality rate (suicide)
  • Hospitalisations for mental health-related disorders

Contextual information


Material for download

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