| Literature DB >> 34217243 |
Camila A Kairuz1,2, Lisa M Casanelia1, Keziah Bennett-Brook2, Julieann Coombes2, Uday Narayan Yadav3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Racism is increasingly recognised as a significant health determinant that contributes to health inequalities. In Australia efforts have been made to bridge the recognised health gap between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and other Australians. This systematic scoping review aimed to assess, synthesise, and analyse the evidence in Australia about the impacts of racism on the mental and physical health of Aboriginal and Torrens Strait Islander peoples.Entities:
Keywords: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders; Mental health; Physical health; Racial discrimination; Racism; Scoping review; Wellbeing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34217243 PMCID: PMC8254223 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-11363-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
List of search terms
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram
Characteristics of the studies
| Study ID | Tittle | Journal | Study Design | Location | Sample size | Sample source | Age group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cave et al. (2019) [ | Caregiver-perceived racial discrimination is associated with diverse mental health outcomes in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children aged 7–12 years. | International Journal for Equity in Health | Cohort study | Australia/ 11 cities | 1759/ No representative | First 8 waves of The Longitudinal Study of Indigenous Children (LSIC) study | 4–12 years |
| Paradies et al. (2012) [ | The DRIUD study: exploring mediating pathways between racism and depressive symptoms among Indigenous Australians. | Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology | Cross- sectional study | Darwin (Northern Territory) | 185/No representative | Diabetes and Related conditions in Urban Indigenous people in the Darwin region (DRIUD) study | 15 years and over |
| Paradies et al. (2012) [ | The DRIUD study: racism and self-assessed health status in an indigenous population | BMC public health | Cross- sectional study | Darwin (Northern Territory) | 164/No representative | Diabetes and Related conditions in Urban Indigenous people in the Darwin region (DRIUD) study | 15 years and over |
| Macedo et al. (2019) [ | Effects of racism on the socio-emotional wellbeing of Aboriginal Australian children | International Journal for Equity in Health | Cohort study | Australia/ 11 cities | 1060/ No representative | Children of waves 6,7 and 8 of the LSIC study | 6–12 years |
| Temple et al. (2019) [ | Experiences of Racism among Older Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People: Prevalence, Sources, and Association with Mental Health | Canadian Journal on Aging | Cross- sectional study | Remote and non-remote areas across all Australia | 2606/Representative | National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey (NATSISS) | > 45 years |
| Kelaher et al. (2014) [ | Experiencing racism in health care: the mental health impacts for Victorian Aboriginal communities | Medical Journal of Australia | Cross- sectional study | 2 rural and 2 metropolitan areas of Victoria | 755/No representative | Mental health impacts of racial discrimination in Victorian Aboriginal communities’ survey | > 18 years |
| Shepherd et al. (2017) [ | The impact of racial discrimination on the health of Australian Indigenous children aged 5–10 years: analysis of national longitudinal data | International Journal for Equity in Health | Cohort study | 11 sites across Australia | 1239/No representative | Waves 1–6 of the LSIC study | 5–10 years |
| Larson et al. (2007) [ | It’s enough to make you sick: The impact of racism on the health of aboriginal Australians | Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health | Cross- sectional study | one Isolated rural town in Australia | 639/No representative | Survey conducted in late 2003 | > 18 years |
| Markwick et al. (2019) [ | Perceived racism may partially explain the gap in health between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Victorians: A cross-sectional population-based study | Ssm-Population Health | Cross- sectional study | People living in private dwellings across Victoria | 33,833 people, including 387 Aboriginal Participants | Three Victorian Population Health Surveys (VPHS) conducted in 2011,2012, 2014 | > 18 years |
| Cave et al. (2019) [ | Racial discrimination and the health and wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children: Does the timing of first exposure matter? | Ssm-Population Health | Cohort study | Australia/ 11 cities | 1759/No representative | first 8 cohorts of Footprints in time: The Longitudinal Study of Indigenous Children (LSIC) | 6 months - 12 years |
| Priest et al. (2011) [ | Racism and health among urban Aboriginal young people | BMC public health | Cross- sectional study | Melbourne | 172/No representative | Wave 1 of the Young People’s Project (YPP) | 12–26 years |
| Priest et al. (2011) [ | Racism as a determinant of social and emotional wellbeing for aboriginal Australian youth | Medical Journal of Australia | Cross- sectional study | Top end of Northern Territory | 345/No representative | Wave 3 of the Aboriginal Birth Cohort (ABC) study | 16–20 years |
Instrument to measure racism, type, severity and time of exposition
| Study ID | Tittle | Type of racism and direct or indirect | Instrument to measure racism | Time of exposition | Severity of Exposition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cave et al. (2019) [ | Caregiver-perceived racial discrimination is associated with diverse mental health outcomes in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children aged 7–12 years. | Interpersonal/direct, caregiver perceived | Has the kid been bullied or treated unfairly at preschool or school by children or adults because they were Aboriginal? | No specified | No specified |
| Paradies et al. (2012) [ | The DRIUD study: exploring mediating pathways between racism and depressive symptoms among Indigenous Australians. | Interpersonal/ direct, self-reported | Measure of Indigenous Racism Experiences (MIRE) | No specified | Number of Settings |
| Paradies et al. (2012) [ | The DRIUD study: racism and self-assessed health status in an indigenous population | Interpersonal/ direct, self-reported | Measure of Indigenous Racism Experiences (MIRE) | No specified | Number of Settings |
| Macedo et al. (2019) [ | Effects of racism on the socio-emotional wellbeing of Aboriginal Australian children | Interpersonal/ direct, caregiver perceived | Has the child been bullied or treated unfairly at school because he/she is Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander? | -No information on timing of racism exposure. -Cohort K outcomes measured 2 years after info of racism collected. -Cohort B outcomes measured 1 year after info of racism was collected | No examined |
| Temple et al. (2019) [ | Experiences of Racism among Older Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People: Prevalence, Sources, and Association with Mental Health | Interpersonal and Institutional / direct, Self-reported | In the last 12 months have you had any of the following experiences because you are Indigenous? (prompts card with options displayed) In which situation where you treated unfairly? How often? | In the previous 12 months | Frequency: always, often, sometimes, rarely, once |
| Kelaher et al. (2014) [ | Experiencing racism in health care: the mental health impacts for Victorian Aboriginal communities | Interpersonal / direct, self-reported | Survey about types of interpersonal racism experienced in the past 12 months and in what settings | In the previous 12 months | No specified |
| Shepherd et al. (2017) [ | The impact of racial discrimination on the health of Australian Indigenous children aged 5–10 years: analysis of national longitudinal data | interpersonal/ indirect and direct, reported by carer | Have you been treated unfairly, discriminated or treated badly because you are Aboriginal or TSI? How often does your family experience racism, discrimination or prejudice? has the study child been bullied or treated unfairly at school because he/she is Aboriginal or TSI? | No specified | Time limited: just in one wave Persistent: in multiple waves |
| Larson et al. (2007) [ | It’s enough to make you sick: The impact of racism on the health of aboriginal Australians | Interpersonal / direct, self-reported | Within the past four weeks have you felt emotionally upset as a result of how you were treated because of your race? Within the past four weeks have you experienced any physical stress or symptoms as a result of how you were treated because of your race? | Within the past 4 weeks | No specified |
| Markwick et al. (2019) [ | Perceived racism may partially explain the gap in health between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Victorians: A cross-sectional population-based study | No specified / direct, self-reported | How often, if at all, have you received unfair treatment in the last 12 months because you are an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander? In the last 12 months, have you experienced discrimination or been treated unfairly because of your racial, ethnic, cultural or religious background? | In the previous 12 months | Never, at least yearly, at least monthly: association with health not reported only for Aboriginals |
| Cave et al. (2019) [ | Racial discrimination and the health and wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children: Does the timing of first exposure matter? | Interpersonal/ caregiver perceived | Has the kid been bullied or treated unfairly at preschool or school by children or adults because he/she is aboriginal? has the kid been bullied or treated unfairly? If yes was it for being Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander? | No specified | No examined |
| Priest et al. (2011) [ | Racism and health among urban Aboriginal young people | No specified / direct, self-reported. | Do you feel discriminated against because you are Koori? (Not at all and a little / some, quite a bit or a lot) | No specified | Amount: analysis with outcomes not reported |
| Priest et al. (2011) [ | Racism as a determinant of social and emotional wellbeing for aboriginal Australian youth | No specified / direct, self-reported. | Have you been treated unfairly or discriminated against because you are Aboriginal? (little bit/fair bit and lots) | No specified | Amount: analysis with outcomes not reported |
Prevalence of self-reported racism or racism reported by parent or carer according to Australia States and Territories and age group
| Prevalence range % | Number of studies (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Across Australia | 6.9–45% | 6 (50%) |
| Northern Territory | 32–75% | 3 (25%) |
| Queensland | No studies Found | No studies Found |
| New South Wales | No studies Found | No studies Found |
| Victoria | 52.3–97% | 3 (25%) |
| South Australia | No studies found | No studies found |
| Western Australia | No studies found | |
| Tasmania | No studies found | No studies found |
| Children (0–12 years old) | 6.9–20.4% | 4 (33.33%) |
| Teens and Adults (12–45 years old) | 32–97% | 7 (58.33%) |
| Elderly (> 45 years old) | 31% | 1 (8.33%) |
The table shows prevalence of self-report of at least 1 experience of racism.
Prevalence reported racism according to each study
| Study | Title | Reported prevalence |
|---|---|---|
Cave et al. (2019) [ | Caregiver-perceived racial discrimination is associated with diverse mental health outcomes in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children aged 7–12 years. | 20.4% at least one exposure |
| Paradies et al. (2012) [ | The DRIUD study: exploring mediating pathways between racism and depressive symptoms among Indigenous Australians. | • Frequency: 50% hardly ever, 25% sometimes, often or very often. • Setting: 25% only one setting,30% two settings, 25% three settings, 20% four or more settings. |
| Paradies et al. (2012) [ | The DRIUD study: racism and self-assessed health status in an indigenous population. | • Frequency: 50% hardly ever, 25% sometimes, often or very often. • Setting: 25% only one setting, 30% two settings, 25% three settings, 20% four or more settings. |
| Macedo et al. (2019) [ | Effects of racism on the socio-emotional wellbeing of Aboriginal Australian children. | • Cohort K 15% • Cohort B 14% |
| Temple et al. (2019) [ | Experiences of Racism among Older Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People: Prevalence, Sources, and Association with Mental Health. | • 31% At least one experience of racism. • Frequency: 5.7% always, 15.7% often, 39.9% sometimes, 28.1% rarely, 10.6% only once. |
| Kelaher et al. (2014) [ | Experiencing racism in health care: the mental health impacts for Victorian Aboriginal communities. | • Frequency: 97% at least one incident, 25% between 1 and 7 experiences, 38% between 8 and 11, 34% 12 or more experiences. • Setting: 67% shops, |
| Shepherd et al. (2017) [ | The impact of racial discrimination on the health of Australian Indigenous children aged 5–10 years: analysis of national longitudinal data | • Experienced by carers: 40% (69% time limited, 31% persistent). • Experienced by families: 45% (60% time limited, 40% persistent) • Experienced by child:14% (72% time limited, 28% persistent) |
Larson et al. (2007) [ | It’s enough to make you sick: The impact of racism on the health of aboriginal Australians. | Aboriginal people 3.6 times more likely to report racially based negative treatment than non-Aboriginal people |
| Markwick et al. (2019) [ | Perceived racism may partially explain the gap in health between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Victorians: A cross-sectional population-based study. | Prevalence of racism among Indigenous people not reported |
Cave et al. (2019) [ | Racial discrimination and the health and wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children: Does the timing of first exposure matter? | • First exposure to racial discrimination at 4–5 years 6.9% • First exposure at 7 years 8.3% |
Priest et al. (2011) [ | Racism and health among urban Aboriginal young people | Racism was reported by 52.3% |
Priest et al. (2011) [ | Racism as a determinant of social and emotional wellbeing for aboriginal Australian youth | Racism was reported by 32% |
() Unstandardised linear regression: self-reported negative racially based treatment for Aboriginal respondents −3.6. confidence interval 95% (−6.4 - -0.7). The article does not report % prevalence
() The values 6.9 and 8.3% represent the proportion of participating children who experienced a first exposure to racial discrimination at 4–5 years or at 7 years respectively. The article does not report the general prevalence of racial discrimination among the sample
Quality appraisal of the studies using the Joanna Briggs institute Critical Appraisal tools according to study design
Cohort Studies:
∙ Low quality: studies meeting up to 3 items.
∙ Moderate quality: studies meeting 4–7 items.
∙ High quality: Studies meeting 8–11 items.
Cross-sectional studies:
∙ Low quality: studies meeting up to 3 items
∙ Moderate quality: studies meeting 4–6 items.
∙ High quality: studies meeting 7–8 items.