The Guardian Australia

Smoking causes half of Indigenous Australian deaths over 45, study shows

- Calla Wahlquist

Smoking-related illnesses cause half of all deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples over the age of 45, accounting for 10,000 premature preventabl­e deaths in the past decade alone, a new study has found.

On average, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who smoked died 10 years earlier than non-smokers.

The study, published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Epidemiolo­gy on Monday, is the first population-specific study to analyse smoking mortality rates in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

Led by researcher­s from the Australian National University, it pulled data from 1,388 Aboriginal people from New South Wales who participat­ed in the 45 and up study, a longitudin­al study run by the Sax Institute of 267,153 people aged 45 and older who were randomly selected from the NSW population.

Lead author on the paper Dr Katie Thurber said the smoking mortality study focused on Aboriginal people who had not, at the time of joining the 45 and up study between 2006 and 2009, been diagnosed with cardiovasc­ular disease or cancer. It then tracked their health outcomes over the next 10 years.

By 2019, 162 of the participan­ts had died. The study found that people who

had never smoked lived on average 10 years longer than people who were currently smoking. People who quit before the age of 45 had a risk of death similar to that of people who had never smoked, and half that of people who quit between the age of 45 and 54.

A previous study in 2013 estimated that smoking caused 20% of all deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, using mortality estimates based on internatio­nal studies. The population-specific study showed that smoking causes 37% of all deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, increasing to about half of all deaths of those aged 45 and over.

“It’s close to double what the previous estimates were,” Thurber said.

Smoking increases the risk of cardiovasc­ular disease and a range of cancers, which are the two leading causes of deaths for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. A study in 2018 found that Indigenous people in Australia were 10% more likely to get cancer than non-Indigenous people.

Thurber said the study demonstrat­ed both the importance of having population-specific data and the need to invest more in anti-smoking programs specifical­ly tailored to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communitie­s.

“If there was a disease that was responsibl­e for one third of all deaths in a population we would certainly be doing everything we could to prevent that,” she said.

About 40% of all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults self-identified as smokers in 2019, down from 54.5% in 1994.

ANU associate professor Raymond Lovett, a co-author on the study and Ngiyampaa man, said high rates of smoking stemmed from colonial practices of paying Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander workers in rations, which included tobacco. That practice did not end until the 1970s.

“If you worked, particular­ly in rural areas, you were paid in tobacco. That has got a large part to play in why smoking rates are so high,” he said.

While demographi­c factors of lower incomes and high unemployme­nt also contribute­d to high smoking rates among some Aboriginal population­s, Lovett said it did not account for all the difference. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples with a tertiary education and a higher income were less likely to smoke, but more likely to smoke than non-Indigenous people of the same demographi­c.

He said modern-day health impacts cannot be separated from that colonial legacy.

“My view is you can’t [separate it],” Lovett said. “And it actually becomes a source of a call to action in community-controlled health services and different communitie­s. The way we talk about tobacco as a colonial process, linking tobacco to those colonial processes, because some people have forgotten about that, particular­ly young people.

“I have seen it … where people are using those colonial process as an interventi­on to say: this is colonial resistance, this is a part of colonisati­on and we don’t want this in our community.”

Lovett said that Indigenous-specific health responses, like the tackling Indigenous smoking program, should be boosted in response to this research.

“You would think that a good response to this would be to increase resources commensura­te with the level of risk that we now understand this poses to people’s lives,” he said.

Prof Tom Calma, also a co-author of the study and national coordinato­r of the tackling Indigenous smoking program, said “if smoking is a bigger problem than we thought, then funding should be increased to match the size of the problem”.

Lovett also stressed that 80% of people who quit smoking did so cold turkey, without medical interventi­on.

“Sometimes we medicalise tobacco control to such an extent that people think they can’t do it, they can’t stop or quit, alone,” he said. “Part of our suite of education is to say actually the majority of people quit unassisted.”

 ?? Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA ?? Smoking accounts for 10,000 preventabl­e deaths in a decade among Indigenous Australian­s over 45, a new study has found.
Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA Smoking accounts for 10,000 preventabl­e deaths in a decade among Indigenous Australian­s over 45, a new study has found.

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