| Literature DB >> 31405081 |
Arnaud Tarantola1, Paul F Horwood2, Cyrille Goarant3, Solène Bertrand4, Onofre Edwin A Merilles4, Thierry Pedron5, Elise Klement-Frutos6,7, Philippe Sansonetti8, Lluis Quintana-Murci9, Vincent Richard10.
Abstract
Several diseases and vulnerabilities associated with genetic or microbial factors are more frequent among populations of Oceanian, Non-European, Non-Asian descent (ONENA). ONENA are specific and have long been isolated geographically. To our knowledge, there are no published official, quantitative, aggregated data on the populations impacted by these excess vulnerabilities in Oceania. We searched official census reports for updated estimates of the total population for each of the Pacific Island Countries and Territories (including Australia) and the US State of Hawaii, privileging local official statistical or censual sources. We multiplied the most recent total population estimate by the cumulative percentage of the ONENA population as determined in official reports. Including Australia and the US State of Hawaii, Oceania counts 27 countries and territories, populated in 2016 by approximately 41 M inhabitants (17 M not counting Australia) among which approximately 12.5 M (11.6 M not counting Australia) consider themselves of entire or partial ONENA ancestry. Specific genetic and microbiome traits of ONENA may be unique and need further investigation to adjust risk estimates, risk prevention, diagnostic and therapeutic strategies, to the benefit of populations in the Pacific and beyond.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes mellitus; epidemiology; ethnic groups; global health; indigenous health; infectious diseases; medical genetics; non-communicable diseases; nutritional and metabolic diseases; pacific islands; type 2
Year: 2019 PMID: 31405081 PMCID: PMC6789437 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed4030114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Estimates of total populations and of population subgroups considered/self-declared as descending entirely or in part of ONENA populations, Oceania, 2016.
| Territory (Country or Commonwealth) | Most Recent Population Estimate | Year of Census or Estimate | Census or Best Estimate in 2016 * | Ethnic Groups (Adapted from Cited Sources) | Estimated** and Rounded-off 2016 ONENA Population | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | % | ||||||
|
| 55,519 | 2010 | 54,196 | Native Pacific islander or mixed 94.4%; Asian or mixed 4.4%; White 0.9%; Other 0.1% | 51,500 | 95% | [ |
|
| 24,051,000 | 2016 | 24,051,000 | European/mixed European and other 91%; Asian/mixed Asian and other 6%; Indigenous Australian/mixed Indigenous Australian and Torres Straits Islanders and other 3%; Pacific Islanders 0.7% | 890,000 | 4% | [ |
|
| 17,459 | 2016 | 17,459 | Cook Island Maori 81.3%; part Cook Island Maori 6.7%; other 11.9% | 15,400 | 88% | [ |
|
| 6370 | 2015 | 6370 | Rapa Nui 59.9%; Andean Chilean 39.3%; Other 0.9% | 3800 | 60% | [ |
|
| 102,843 | 2010 | 105,000 | Chuukese or mixed 46.8%; Pohnpeian or mixed 28.3%; Kosraean or mixed 6.3%; Yapese or mixed 6.1%; Other Pacific Islanders or mixed 10.4%; Asian 1.3%; White 0.3%; Other 0.6% | 102,600 | 98% | [ |
|
| 869,458 | 2015 | 898,000 | Chinese 0.6%; European 0.4%; iTaukei 56.8%; Part European 1.3%; Indian 37.5%; Rotuman 1.2%; Other Pacific Islanders 0.8%; Other 1.5% | 529,000 | 59% | [ |
|
| 272,800 | 2015 | 272,800 | Polynesian 82.7%; Asian 4.7%%; European 11.9% | 226,400 | 83% | [ |
|
| 162,742 | 2016 | 162,742 | Chamorro (or mixed) 43.4%; other Pacific Islander (or mixed) 13.3%; Asian 34.3%; white 7.1%; other 2.1% | 92,300 | 57% | [ |
|
| 1,431,603 | 2015 | 1,428,557 | Asian 37.3%; Multiethnic 23.0%; White 26.7%, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander 9.9%; Black 2.6%; Native American 0.5% | 138,800 | 10% | [ |
|
| 110,110 | 2015 | 114,000 | I-Kiribati & mixed 98.0%; Tuvalu 0.2%; Fiji 0.1%; Australia 0.04%; New Zealand 0.6%; European 0.1%; Chinese 0.1%; Other 0.9% | 108,200 | 98% | [ |
|
| 55,158 | 2011 | 56,400 | Pacific Islanders 92.7%; Asian 3.6%; Mixed 2.7%; Other 1.2% | 49,300 | 98% | [ |
|
| 10,084 | 2011 | 10,000 | Nauruan 90.8%; other Pacific Islander 6.1%; Asian 2.1; Other 1.0% | 8400 | 84% | [ |
|
| 268,767 | 2014 | 268,767 | Kanak (Melanesian) 39.0%; European 27.1%, Wallisian & Futunian 8.2%, Tahitian 2.1%; Indonesian 1.4%; Vietnamese0.9%; Ni-Vanuatu 1%; “Caledonian”/other/undeclared 22.7% | 135,000 | 50% | [ |
|
| 4,693,000 | 2016 | 4,693,000 | European 66.7%; Maori 13.4%; Asian 10.6%; Pacific Islander 6.7%; other 2.6% | 1,126,300 | 24% | [ |
|
| 1611 | 2011 | 1600 | Niuean 66.5%; Part Niuean 13.4%; Pacific Islander 8%; Asian and European 12% | 1800 | 88% | [ |
|
| 1796 | 2011 | 2210 | European ancestry 88%; Polynesian ancestry 12% | 66 | 3% | [ |
|
| 53,883 | 2010 | 55,700 | Asian 49.9%; Pacific islander 34.8%; Mixed 12.7%; Other 2.5% | 19,100 | 35% | [ |
|
| 17,501 | 2012 | 17,800 | Palauan 72.5%; Filipino 16.3%; Chinese 1.6%; other Asian 5.0%; white 0.9%; Carolinian 1%; other Micronesian 2.4%; other 0.3% | 13,000 | 76% | [ |
|
| 7,620,000 | 2015 | 7,776,000 | New Guinea Papuan 84%; New Guinea Melanesian 15%; other (Negrito; Polynesian; Melanesian; other) 1% | 7,776,000 | 100% | [ |
|
| 57 | 2012 | 54 | European; Tahitian | 0 | 0% | [ |
|
| 187,820 | 2011 | 194,899 | Samoan or part-Samoan 98.5%; other/missing/don’t know: 1.5% | 191,800 | 99% | [ |
|
| 642,000 | 2015 | 639,418 | Melanesian 95.3%; Polynesian 3.1%; Micronesian 1.2%; other 0.3% | 637,500 | 100% | [ |
|
| 1499 | 2016 | 1499 | Tokelauan 69.3%; Samoan 14.1%; Tuvaluan 9.2%; Other Pacific Islander 3.5%; European 2.8%; Other ethnic group or not stated 1.1% | 1400 | 96% | [ |
|
| 103,252 | 2011 | 107,000 | Tongan (or mixed) 97.5%; Pacific islanders or mixed (0.7%); European 0.6%; Asian 1.0%; Other/not stated: 0.3% | 105,000 | 98% | [ |
|
| 10,782 | 2012 | 10,000 | Tuvaluan or mixed Tuvaluan 99.1%; Other 0.9% | 9,900 | 99% | [ |
|
| 234,023 | 2009 | 271,000 | Ni-Vanuatu 97.6%; part Ni-Vanuatu 1.1%; 1.3% other | 268,500 | 99% | [ |
|
| 12,197 | 2013 | 13,000 | Polynesian | 13,000 | 100% | [ |
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* Projected 2016 estimates from the United Nations World Statistics Pocketbook 2016 [21] unless otherwise indicated; ** Rounded-off estimates obtained by multiplying the cumulative percentages of ethnic groups found in various cited sources by the total population estimated in 2014–2016 found in various sources (not shown), also cited. In practice, this sometimes means applying percentages documented in 2002 to documented or projected populations in 2015. These data, and especially their apparent precision, must be considered with caution.
Figure 1Oceania and relative estimates of population subgroups considered/self-declared as descending entirely or in part of Oceanian of Non-European, Non-Asian descent (ONENA) populations, Pacific region and US State of Hawaii, 2016. Points represent 1 000 pop and are randomly distributed, not georeferenced.