In Australia’s Northern Territory, 49% of the landmass and 85% of the coastline is owned by Indigenous peoples.1 More than 70% of the NT Indigenous population live on Indigenous land, predominantly in remote townships.2 Nationally, Indigenous life expectancy is well below the Australian average.3 In the NT, this lower life expectancy is underpinned by a disproportionate burden of disease linked to inactivity, malnutrition, social disorders and socioeconomic disadvantage.4 Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease account for 40% of excess Indigenous mortality and over 21 800 preventable Indigenous hospital admissions annually.3
Pressure to centralise remote Indigenous populations and services into townships has increased5 despite evidence suggesting this would lead to worse health outcomes.6-8 Depopulation of remote areas has contributed to ecological degradation through the decline of Indigenous land management; introduced weeds, animals and wildfires now damage landscapes unchecked by the dislocated owners.1 Indigenous Australians have long asserted the importance of their enduring relationship to ancestral lands and seas. This is acknowledged in the national strategic framework for Indigenous health:
For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples health does not just entail the freedom of the individual from sickness but requires support for healthy and interdependent relationships between families, communities, land, sea and spirit. The focus must be on spiritual, cultural, emotional and social well-being as well as physical health.9
Traditional land owners aspire to maintain links with ancestral estates and have evolved innovative natural resource management programs, undertaking both customary and contemporary ecological services to “care for country”10 (Box 1 and Box 2). In addition to environmental health gains,14 caring for country has the potential to positively influence health behaviours and the social determinants of health.15 This has not been systematically investigated, despite Indigenous demands for a shift in the focus of health research to “what works”, in particular, the social and cultural determinants of health and resilience, coupled with an an awareness that effective interventions may arise from outside the health sector.16
A 2-year collaboration with a remote Arnhem Land township and network of surrounding homelands11 identified six core activities in caring for country: time on country; burning of annual grasses; gathering of food and medicinal resources; ceremony; protecting sacred areas; and producing artwork. Participation in these activities was quantified on a four-point ordinal response format by means of an interviewer-administered questionnaire that has been rigorously and systematically validated in this population.11 Accurate weighted caring-for-country composite scale scores were subsequently derived.
Participants wore light clothing and no shoes while their weight was recorded on digital scales to the nearest 100 g, their height was measured to the nearest centimetre with a mounted stadiometer, and waist circumference was measured to the nearest millimetre with an inelastic tape by standard techniques.17 Body mass index (BMI) was derived from participants’ weight and height. Abdominal obesity was defined as ≥ 90 cm for men and ≥ 80 cm for women.18
Participants’ type 2 diabetes status was determined by review of medical records or an indicative blood glucose level, confirmed by a subsequent oral glucose tolerance test. We calculated 10-year absolute coronary heart disease (CHD) risk for participants aged 30–54 years using the Framingham equations,19 excluding adjustment for left ventricular hypertrophy, because an electrocardiogram was not part of the preventive health check. We estimated the cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk category using the New Zealand Guidelines Group’s handheld chart in conjunction with review of the participants’ medical history and adjustments for isolated extreme risk factors and ethnicity.20 Psychological distress was measured by a modified five-item version of the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K5) using the same interviewer-administered questions and cue card as the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey.21
We used an interviewer-administered questionnaire11 to collect self-reported data on primary place of residence, education, income, diet, physical activity and smoking status. To avoid confounding associations between health outcomes and caring for country, we controlled for residence in our analysis because: (i) township residents’ caring for country activities may be constrained by decreased access to customary estates; (ii) caring for country is more common on homelands, though not all homelands residents participate;11 and (iii) homelands residents may have less access to vehicles, takeaway food, cigarettes and processed foods.
Of the eligible population of 1284 adults aged 15–54 years in the remote Arnhem Land community, 298 people (23.2%) participated in this study. Most (196) were township residents while the remainder (102) were residents of 16 Aboriginal homelands. Participants ranged in age from 15 to 54 years (mean age, 30.96 years; SD, 10.15 years), and 59% (175) were men. The cross-sectional age structure of the sample was similar to the census profile (χ2 = 9.63; P = 0.2).2
Ten participants were unable to have their weight and height measured on standardised equipment, and several questionnaire items were incomplete (Box 3). One participant declined a blood test and 17 additional HbA1c samples were incorrectly processed by the pathology laboratory. Seventeen urine samples were of insufficient volume to perform an ACR or had leaked during transport. Measurement of psychological distress with the K5 scale was discontinued halfway through the study period because of workforce shortages in the study team; the response rate for the period when it was measured was 90%.
Homelands residence was significantly associated with marginally higher income, lower educational attainment, less consumption of takeaway foods, more frequent consumption of bush foods, more frequent exercise and greater participation in caring for country activities (Box 3).
Box 4 and Box 5 show that after adjusting for sociodemographic factors, place of residence and health behaviours, an interquartile range rise in the weighted composite caring-for-country scale score was significantly associated with more frequent exercise and bush food consumption, and with better health on most clinical outcomes (lower BMI, less abdominal obesity, less diabetes, lower blood pressure, lower HbA1c level, higher HDL cholesterol level, normal ACR, lower psychological distress and lower CVD risk). Caring for country was not associated with smoking, alcohol use or the frequency of consumption of store produce or takeaway foods. Caring for country demonstrated inverse trends for lipid ratio and CHD risk, but these were not statistically significant. All significant clinical outcome models met our evaluation criteria.
Using a systematically developed and validated measure of Indigenous participation in caring for country,11 we have shown several significant and substantial associations with health outcomes relevant to excess Indigenous morbidity and mortality. Consistent with previous work15 and international models of Indigenous health promotion,22 caring for country was associated with better nutrition, more frequent physical activity and fewer chronic disease risk factors and diagnoses. Our findings are consistent with other reports of better health outcomes among homelands residents;6-8 in addition, we offer an explanation (caring for country) for these associations from an Indigenous viewpoint.11
Unexpectedly, homelands residence was associated with worse clinical outcomes when controlling for caring for country (Box 5), perhaps because: (i) more homelands people with chronic disease participated in the study, having less access to medical care than township residents; (ii) unwell Indigenous patients often return to homelands to “make themselves well”; or (iii) caring for country explains the superior health outcomes found in the homelands. This last possibility indicates a strength of our study, as it identifies a potential mechanism for how improved health outcomes associated with homelands residence may come about.
Even within a small sample, we have shown statistically significant associations between participation in caring for country and positive health outcomes. Non-significant findings also showed trends consistent with our expectations. Our findings contribute preliminary empirical epidemiological support for: (i) the Indigenous assertion that caring for country may deliver health gains through social, cultural and behavioural pathways;15 and (ii) Indigenous requests to conduct research on workable solutions based on social and cultural determinants of health.16
We are unable to determine the causal direction of the associations between caring for country and health outcomes. We have previously identified plausible pathways15 and, given our findings in this study, a longitudinal and/or intervention study is now merited to elucidate the causal direction of these associations.
The lower than expected cohort prevalence of type 2 diabetes in our study suggests that volunteers for a preventive health check may not be representative in terms of population morbidity. However, our sampling strategy to include participants with varying participation in caring for country was reliable, and involved just under a quarter of the eligible population. Given this, and that the age structure of this sample did not differ significantly from the most recent census,2 significant bias is unlikely. Moreover, if those with established disease or poor health were self-excluded, our findings may constitute: (i) a conservative estimate of health benefit; and (ii) an implied causal-link to better health because unwell people (physically unable to care for country) were (self-)excluded.
Several of our measures were crude and reliant on self-report. Although self-reported smoking status appears to be reliable,23 nutritional assessment is notoriously inaccurate.24 By contrast, our caring for country measure was robust and was validated using test–retest validity, proxy respondent completion and rigorous statistical analysis.11 Our items, piloted and refined with Indigenous health workers in preparation for the study, were considered comprehensible and in a suitable format for this population. Plausible associations between caring for country, health behaviours and clinical outcomes support this assessment.
Neither of our cardiovascular risk measures has been validated for use in this population. The Framingham equations can be used to estimate absolute CHD risk in people aged 30 years and older, and are known to underestimate risk,25 whereas the New Zealand Guidelines Group’s CVD risk chart requires all men and women aged 44 years or younger to be allocated the same age-specific risk. In both cases, however, we believe our findings are a conservative estimate of risk. Other risk factors, such as abdominal obesity and elevated ACR (both of which showed significant inverse associations with caring for country), are proposed to contribute, independently of traditional risk factors, to cardiovascular risk.25 To improve clinical assessment and interventions for cardiovascular risk for Indigenous Australians, we now require cardiovascular risk calculators that incorporate these risk factors, and that are extended to younger age groups.
We propose three main implications of our findings. First, our results provide preliminary empirical support for long-standing Indigenous demands for government investment supporting Indigenous peoples to manage their country.10 This strategy appears likely to deliver ecological health gains,14 sustainable economic development and, possibly, human health gains through social, physical and cultural mechanisms.15
Second, our findings suggest careful reconsideration of conflicting Indigenous affairs policies that are simultaneously discouraging connections with country5 and promoting Indigenous natural resource management.26 Our findings indicate that homelands foster important health-promoting activities that appear to deliver both ecological and human health gains.27
1 Indigenous concepts of “country” and the importance of caring for country
For Indigenous peoples, “country” encompasses an interdependent relationship between Indigenous peoples and their ancestral lands and seas.11 “Country is multi-dimensional — it consists of people, animals, plants, Dreamings; underground, earth, soils, minerals and waters, air . . . People talk about country in the same way that they would talk about a person: they speak to country, sing to country, visit country, worry about country, feel sorry for country, and long for country.”12
“Caring for country” means participating in interrelated activities on Aboriginal lands and seas with the objective of promoting ecological, spiritual and human health. It is also a community-driven movement towards long-term social, cultural, physical and sustainable economic development in rural and remote locations, simultaneously contributing to the conservation of globally valued environmental and cultural assets.13
- Border protection
- Biodiversity conservation, fisheries management
- Quarantine services
- Water resource management
- Wildfire abatement/carbon sequestration
- Sustainable commercial use of wildlife
- Control of invasive weeds and feral animals
- Cultural maintenance activities
3 Overall cohort characteristics and comparison by place of residence (values are mean [SD] unless otherwise specified)
4 Significant associations between caring for country participation, health behaviours and clinical outcomes following multivariate regression
Caring for country participation |
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Difference in lipid ratio (levels of total to HDL cholesterol) |
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- Christopher P Burgess1
- Fay H Johnston2
- Helen L Berry3
- Joseph McDonnell1
- Dean Yibarbuk4
- Charlie Gunabarra5
- Albert Mileran6
- Ross S Bailie1
- 1 Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT.
- 2 Menzies Research Institute, Hobart, TAS.
- 3 National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT.
- 4 Aboriginal Research Practitioners Network, School for Environmental Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT.
- 5 Northern Territory Government Department of Health and Families, Darwin, NT.
- 6 Arnhem Land, NT.
This study was supported by National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) grants 333421 and 320860, Land & Water Australia, and Pfizer Australia Cardiovascular Lipid (CVL). This study did not involve the use of any Pfizer products, nor did Pfizer receive any commercial benefit from this study. Christopher Burgess was supported by a PhD scholarship, initially from the Centre for Remote Health and subsequently NHMRC public health scholarship 333416. Ross Bailie’s work is supported by NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship 283303. We thank the community health board, Indigenous research assistants and the community outstation resource centre for their support of this work. This project has been endorsed as an in-kind project of the Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health, a collaborative partnership funded by the Cooperative Research Centres Program of the Australian Government Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research.
None identified.
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Abstract
Objective: To investigate associations between “caring for country” — an activity that Indigenous peoples assert promotes good health — and health outcomes relevant to excess Indigenous morbidity and mortality.
Design, setting and participants: Cross-sectional study involving 298 Indigenous adults aged 15–54 years in an Arnhem Land community, recruited from March to September 2005.
Main outcome measures: Self-reported involvement in caring for country, health behaviours and clinically measured body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, blood pressure, type 2 diabetes status, albumin to creatinine ratio (ACR), levels of glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, lipid ratio, score on the five-item version of the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K5), and 5-year cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk.
Results: Controlling for sociodemographic characteristics and health behaviours, multivariate regression revealed significant and substantial associations between caring for country and health outcomes. An interquartile range rise in the weighted composite caring-for-country score was significantly associated with more frequent physical activity, better diet, lower BMI (regression coefficient [b] = − 2.83; 95% CI, − 4.56 to − 1.10), less abdominal obesity (odds ratio [OR], 0.43; 95% CI, 0.26–0.72), lower systolic blood pressure (b = − 7.59; 95% CI, − 12.01 to − 3.17), less diabetes (OR, 0.12; 95% CI, 0.03–0.52), lower HbA1c level (b = − 0.45; 95% CI, − 0.79 to − 0.11), non-elevated ACR (OR, 0.28; 95% CI, 0.13–0.60), higher HDL cholesterol level (b = 0.06; 95% CI, 0.01–0.12), lower K5 score (b = − 0.97; 95% CI, − 1.64 to − 0.31) and lower CVD risk (b = − 0.77; 95% CI, − 1.43 to − 0.11).
Conclusions: Greater Indigenous participation in caring for country activities is associated with significantly better health. Although the causal direction of these associations requires clarification, our findings suggest that investment in caring for country may be a means to foster sustainable economic development and gains for both ecological and Indigenous peoples’ health.