The Gold Coast Bulletin

Coast’s most deadly suburb

- KIRSTIN PAYNE kirstin.payne@news.com.au

PIMPAMA has been revealed as one of the most deadly places in Queensland, according to data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

An in-depth suburb by suburb report on death rates shows Pimpama locals have been dying at more than twice the rate of the rest of the Gold Coast.

The study, which looks at the standardis­ed number of deaths per 1000, found Pimpama’s rate of 11.4 well above the city’s rate of 5.1 and the Australian rate of 6.5.

Southport North, Merrimac, Currumbin Valley, Labrador and Varsity Lakes also rated above the national standard.

The Gold Coast also had a higher rate of deaths due to injury, at 53.9 per 100,000 persons compared to the Queensland rate of 45.8.

The rates are calculated by working out the number of deaths compared to the population, while taking into account age groups and sex.

ABS assistant director of demographi­cs Shahid Ullah said the rates alone could not explain the reasons behind Pimpama’s high death rate.

“A large number of elderly in the data set may explain a spike in certain areas, which is the case for Tasmania and South Australia,” he said.

He was unable to give reasons though for what was happening in Pimpama.

Coomera MP Michael Crandon, whose electorate covers Pimpama, said he was surprised by the figures given the average age of the area was 27. “Pimpama has a high number

of tradesmen and young families, so I am surprised.

“Over 44 per cent of the population is under 24 so if you were speculatin­g you could put it down to the accident bubble — a term used in insurance that covers the age group under 31 years more prone to accidents,” he said.

However other ABS data shows a third of deaths in the region were found to be due to coronary artery disease in people over 75.

Gold Coast population profiler Mark Weblin agreed the younger population was generally more risk prone.

“As someone who has looked at the statistics in the Gold Coast, it is really easy to generalise who we are as a community at first glance, but when you look at the statistics you realise we are incredibly diverse.

“We have some of the poorest suburbs in the state next to some of the most affluent,” he said.

In 2017 the national death rate decreased to 6.5 deaths per 1000 from 6.6 in 2016.

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