(no subject)
Apr. 8th, 2008 07:15 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/04/08/2210455.htm?section=wa?section=wa :
A health economist has calculated that the government should be willing to spend $15 billion a year to bridge the gap in life expectancy between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.
Curtin University's Gavin Mooney has estimated the government should spend $340 billion over 22 years, based on the government's spending elsewhere in the health service.[...] He has calculated that the government spends $40,000 per person subsidising a drug that increases life expectancy by one year.
You know, I think if you just paid matching salary to each of Australia's 400,000 Aboriginals of up to $40,000 per year, you'd actually do a lot better job of increasing life expectancy than medicating them. Money for nothing is a recipe for trouble, but doubling income gained from other sources could produce some exciting results, especially if some of that money went into local community trust funds for housing and the like.
A health economist has calculated that the government should be willing to spend $15 billion a year to bridge the gap in life expectancy between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.
Curtin University's Gavin Mooney has estimated the government should spend $340 billion over 22 years, based on the government's spending elsewhere in the health service.[...] He has calculated that the government spends $40,000 per person subsidising a drug that increases life expectancy by one year.
You know, I think if you just paid matching salary to each of Australia's 400,000 Aboriginals of up to $40,000 per year, you'd actually do a lot better job of increasing life expectancy than medicating them. Money for nothing is a recipe for trouble, but doubling income gained from other sources could produce some exciting results, especially if some of that money went into local community trust funds for housing and the like.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 07:28 am (UTC)I think the only health factor that can be associated with Aboriginal people being a part of a wider community of all Aboriginal people is that PEOPLE TELL THEM THEY HAVE A PROBLEM, JUST FOR BEING ABORIGINAL.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 07:35 am (UTC)I wish I had thought of this earlier.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 07:47 am (UTC)You wouldn't tell them "You're aboriginal and thus are less healthy than the white person in the bed next to you"
If you're talking to an obese, white person will you tell them they must be aboriginal for being at risk of these aboriginal diseases?
If the government put more money into Aboriginal care OR non-aboriginal care, two people could be in hospital with identical diseases but one would get treated differently because of their race. If, instead, this money was put into heart disease treatment/research/care (or any other disease which could be better treated with more money) then an Aboriginal person and a non Aboriginal person with the same disease could both receive the same care that they deserve.
Finally, explaining to somebody the reasons for their greater risk of certain diseases is entirely different to calling it an Aboriginal Problem on a political and financial scale.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 07:53 am (UTC)Diabetes isn't an "Aboriginal" disease, in the same way that it's not an "obese" disease. I wouldn't tell Aboriginal people that they must be obese because they're at risk of diabetes... I'm not sure what you're getting at here.
If, instead, this money was put into heart disease treatment/research/care (or any other disease which could be better treated with more money) then an Aboriginal person and a non Aboriginal person with the same disease could both receive the same care that they deserve.
We already know that the way we normally distribute health care resources leads to Aboriginal people being disadvantaged. More attention, not less, needs to be paid to the disparity. Feigning colourblindness doesn't fix racism.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 08:14 am (UTC)And Aboriginal people are disadvantaged in the health system because of cultural divides* and many of them living in remote areas, and I have said that these ARE issues that should be viewed partly as "Aboriginal" issues. Other than that the only reason Aboriginal people would be treated differently than non Aboriginal people would be from racist actions by health workers which is hopefully minimal and if not isn't going to be solved by putting more money into the system, anyway.
As a slight aside, you bring up the point "Racial groups are bullshit social constructions" which is true because we draw imaginary lines around the world to group people, when the within-group differences are significantly greater than the between-group differences that we create. I would like to point out that this is THE SAME for your point "the way we normally distribute health care resources leads to Aboriginal people being disadvantaged". There are many Aboriginal people who are not disadvantaged in the health system and many non Aboriginal people who are. Yes there is a difference between the health advantage of being Aboriginal or not Aboriginal but the differences WITHIN those two groups are more significant. This is my entire point with all this argument... "The Aboriginal Health Problem" is as bullshit a construct as any other imaginary racial dividing lines we choose to create.
*Cultural divides that talking about "The Aboriginal Health Problem" will only increase.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 09:32 am (UTC)ETA: * to be more clear, the vast, vast majority of Aboriginal people are disadvantaged in the health care system, whether they are dark or pale, remote or urban, poor or wealthy and educated or not.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 11:03 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 11:26 am (UTC)Others that I work with have more extreme views.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 11:06 am (UTC)I am surprised if it is really that significant... admitedly I do have very little experience with health care in general especially the treatment of various groups of people in terms of health care. However, I would be surprised to find that people involved in health care are more racist than the average population, which I don't see as being bad enough to really cause serious problems. I guess it could be a bit worse in rural areas but that comes down to either the cultural divide or rural health services being crap in general and needing improvement.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-08 11:24 am (UTC)You might feel differently if you were on the receiving end of the racism.
ETA: Not all extra healthcare funding has to be more hospitals for Aboriginal people or whatever- a significant part needs to be training Aboriginal people to provide healthcare within and outside the mainstream health care system.