Cardiovascular diseases contribute substantially to the poor health and reduced life expectancy of Indigenous Australians. Heart failure is a common, disabling, progressive and costly complication of these disorders. The epidemiology of heart failure and the adequacy of relevant health service provision in Indigenous Australians are not well delineated.
A systematic search of the electronic databases PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cinahl Plus, Informit and Google Scholar was undertaken in April 2012 for peer-reviewed journal articles relevant to the topic of heart failure in Indigenous Australians. Additionally, a website search was done to identify other pertinent publications, particularly government reports.
There was a paucity of relevant peer-reviewed research, and government reports dominated the results. Ten journal articles, 1 published conference abstract and 10 reports were eligible for inclusion. Indigenous Australians reportedly have higher morbidity and mortality from heart failure than their non-Indigenous counterparts (age-standardised prevalence ratio 1.7; age-standardised hospital separation ratio =3; crude per capita hospital expenditure ratio 1.58; age-adjusted mortality ratio >2). Despite the evident disproportionate burden of heart failure in Indigenous Australians, the accuracy of estimation from administrative data is limited by poor indigenous identification, inadequate case ascertainment and exclusion of younger subjects from mortality statistics. A recent journal article specifically documented a high prevalence of heart failure in Central Australian Aboriginal adults (5.3%), noting frequent undiagnosed disease. One study examined barriers to health service provision for Indigenous Australians in the context of heart failure.
Despite the shortcomings of available published data, it is clear that Indigenous Australians have an excess burden of heart failure. Emerging data suggest that undiagnosed cases may be common in this population. In order to optimise management and to inform policy, high quality research on heart failure in Indigenous Australians is required to delineate accurate epidemiological indicators and to appraise health service provision.
Notes
Cites: JAMA. 1995 May 10;273(18):1450-67654275
Cites: Med J Aust. 2009 Mar 16;190(6):298-30219296809
Cites: J Am Coll Cardiol. 1997 Jul;30(1):27-349207617
Cites: Aust N Z J Public Health. 1998 Feb;22(1):86-919599858
Cites: Aust N Z J Public Health. 1999 Apr;23(2):159-6310330730
Cites: Eur Heart J. 2004 Nov;25(21):1911-915522470
Cites: Med J Aust. 2005 May 16;182(10):507-1215896178
Cites: Kidney Int. 2005 Sep;68(3):1289-9316105063
Cites: Am J Cardiol. 2005 Oct 10;96(7B):44-816226935
Cites: Int J Epidemiol. 2009 Apr;38(2):470-719047078
Cites: Aust N Z J Public Health. 2009 Aug;33(4):325-3119689592