Socio-economic outcome area 13

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families and households are safe

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Target 13

By 2031, the rate of all forms of family violence and abuse against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and children is reduced at least by 50%, as progress towards zero.

Nationally in 2018-19, 8.4% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females aged 15 years and over experienced domestic physical or face-to-face threatened physical harm (figure CtG13.1).

There is no new data since the baseline year of 2018-19. Please refer to the How to interpret the data page for more information.

Target data specifications

Target 13: All forms of family violence and abuse against women and children is reduced

Outcome:

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families and households are safe.

Target:

By 2031, the rate of all forms of family violence and abuse against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and children is reduced at least by 50%, as progress towards zero.

Indicator:

Proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females aged 15 years or over who experienced domestic physical harm or face‑to‑face threatened physical harm in the last 12 months.

Measure:

This measure is defined as:

Numerator — number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females aged 15 years or over who experienced physical harm and/or face‑to‑face threatened physical harm in the last 12 months where the perpetrator was a family member

Denominator — total number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females aged 15 years or over

and is presented as a percentage.

Target established:

National Agreement on Closing the Gap July 2020; revised April 2021

Latest dashboard update:

23 June 2021

Indicator type:

Target

Interpretation of change:

A low or decreasing proportion is desirable.

Data source(s):

Name: National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey (NATSIHS)

Frequency: Periodic

Documentation (links): https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-peoples/national-aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-health-survey/2018-19

Data provider:

Provider name: Australian Bureau of Statistics

Provider area: Centre for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Statistics

Baseline year:

2018–19

Target year:

2030–31

Disaggregations:

State and territory and Australia.

Computation:

Numerator divided by Denominator multiplied by 100.

Counting rules

The data is for all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who were usual residents of private dwellings in Australia and were present at the survey interview.

Geographical variables are based on the location of the household.

‘Physical harm’ refers to any incident where a person was physically hurt or harmed by someone on purpose, including physical fights. Other forms of abuse (for example: sexual, emotional, psychological) are not included.

‘Face‑to‑face threatened physical harm’ refers to threats of physical harm that occurred face‑to‑face.

‘Family/domestic violence (physical or threatened harm)’ includes perpetrators who are a current partner, previous partner, boyfriend, girlfriend, date, ex‑boyfriend, ex‑girlfriend, parent, child, sibling or other family member.

Excludes (numerator):

  • people who did not state if they were a victim of domestic physical or threatened physical harm.

Supporting calculations

  • Confidence intervals.

See How to interpret the data for further information.

Data quality considerations:

See NATSIHS methodology for further information: https://www.abs.gov.au/methodologies/national-aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-health-survey-methodology

The data has been randomly adjusted using perturbation to avoid the release of confidential data. Discrepancies may occur between sums of the component items and totals.

The data does not measure experience of violence for children.

Experiences of harm are likely to be under‑reported. Due to the sensitive nature of the questions, responses were not compulsory, and a person may have chosen not to answer some or any of the questions.

The physical and threatened physical harm data collected in the 2018–19 NATSIHS is not comparable to other ABS data sources collecting similar data, including data from: the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey; the General Social Survey; the Personal Safety Survey; or, Recorded Crime – Victims.

Estimates that have a relative standard error between 25% and 50% should be used with caution. Estimates with a relative standard error of 50% or more are considered too unreliable for general use.

Future reporting:

Additional disaggregations required for future reporting:

  • remoteness areas and other small geographic areas (where available)
  • disability status
  • gender
  • age
  • Indigenous status (comparable data on non‑Indigenous people is currently not available).

Supporting indicators

Driver

Contextual information

  • Rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and children victims of family and domestic violence recorded by police

    Data available for NSW, SA & NT

  • Rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and children victims of sexual assault, by victim-offender relationship

    Data available for NSW, QLD, SA & NT

  • Rates of hospitalisation for family violence assaults for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and children

    By relationship to perpetrator

  • Rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and children homicide victim rates

    By victim-offender relationship

  • Proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women reporting to have sought help from support services

    Police, legal, counselling, housing, etc., by service type

  • Proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women reporting barriers in seeking help from support services

    By barrier type

  • Rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women seeking assistance from Specialist Homelessness Services for reasons of family violence

    Admin data based; AIHW Specialist Homelessness Services database

  • Proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander persons accompanied with children seeking assistance from Specialist Homelessness Services for reasons of family violence

    AIHW Specialist Homelessness Services database


Material for download

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