OBJECTIVE: To assess the extent to which indigenous status confounds the association between remoteness and neonatal mortality in Queensland. METHODS: We used routine data from the Queensland Perinatal Data Collection. Poisson regression modelling was used to assess confounding. RESULTS: Babies born to Indigenous mothers have mortality rates 2.42 times those of the rest of the population, regardless of whether they live in urban, rural or remote areas (95% CI 2.09-2.80). The babies of non-Indigenous women who live in remote areas have a low risk of neonatal death, similar to their rural and urban counterparts. CONCLUSION: In Queensland, the key demographic variable that determines neonatal mortality is indigenous status, not remoteness. IMP...
Background: The aim of this study was to study ecological correlations between age-adjusted all-caus...
Background: Australia is a wealthy developed country. However, there are significant disparities in ...
Background Perinatal mortality rates are typically higher in Aboriginal than non‐Aboriginal populat...
Abstract Objective:To assess the extent to which Indigenous status confounds the association between...
Objective: To determine whether remoteness category of residence of Indigenous women affects the per...
Aim: To compare post-neonatal mortality among urban and rural Indigenous babies in Queensland
Background: Comparisons of birth outcomes between Australian Indigenous and non-Indigenous populatio...
Background: This paper initially describes premature mortality by Aboriginality in South Australia d...
Background: It remains unclear how indigenous mortality varies between residential areas. We conduct...
OBJECTIVE: To compare perinatal outcomes for all births, and the morbidity and mortality patterns of...
Background The health disadvantages faced by Australian Aboriginal peoples are evidenced in early li...
The perinatal mortality rate among Indigenous Australians is still double that of the rest of the co...
Abstract Background Despite the well-recognised Indigenous-non-Indigenous health disparity, some rep...
ABSTRACT Objectives The disparity between the infant mortality rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strai...
Background The aim of this study was to study ecological correlations between age-adjusted all-cause...
Background: The aim of this study was to study ecological correlations between age-adjusted all-caus...
Background: Australia is a wealthy developed country. However, there are significant disparities in ...
Background Perinatal mortality rates are typically higher in Aboriginal than non‐Aboriginal populat...
Abstract Objective:To assess the extent to which Indigenous status confounds the association between...
Objective: To determine whether remoteness category of residence of Indigenous women affects the per...
Aim: To compare post-neonatal mortality among urban and rural Indigenous babies in Queensland
Background: Comparisons of birth outcomes between Australian Indigenous and non-Indigenous populatio...
Background: This paper initially describes premature mortality by Aboriginality in South Australia d...
Background: It remains unclear how indigenous mortality varies between residential areas. We conduct...
OBJECTIVE: To compare perinatal outcomes for all births, and the morbidity and mortality patterns of...
Background The health disadvantages faced by Australian Aboriginal peoples are evidenced in early li...
The perinatal mortality rate among Indigenous Australians is still double that of the rest of the co...
Abstract Background Despite the well-recognised Indigenous-non-Indigenous health disparity, some rep...
ABSTRACT Objectives The disparity between the infant mortality rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strai...
Background The aim of this study was to study ecological correlations between age-adjusted all-cause...
Background: The aim of this study was to study ecological correlations between age-adjusted all-caus...
Background: Australia is a wealthy developed country. However, there are significant disparities in ...
Background Perinatal mortality rates are typically higher in Aboriginal than non‐Aboriginal populat...