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Health of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and their grandparents: a Western Australian retrospective cohort study
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Health of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and their grandparents: a Western Australian retrospective cohort study

Alison Gibberd, Jocelyn Jones, Louisa Jorm, Carrington Shepherd, Sandra Eades and Bridgette McNamara
BMC public health, Vol.25(1), 3450
2025
PMID: 41068646
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Published1.63 MBDownloadView
CC BY V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

Adult Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples Child Health - statistics & numerical data Child Mortality - ethnology Child, Preschool Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data Female Grandparents Health Status Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data Humans Infant Infant, Newborn Intergenerational Relations Male Retrospective Studies Western Australia - epidemiology
In Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, childcare is traditionally shared by kin. Little is known about how grandparental care impacts Aboriginal child health and evidence from other countries is mixed. We explored relationships between grandparental health (a proxy for grandparental care) and health and health service use by Aboriginal children born in Western Australia from 2000 to 2013. This is a retrospective cohort study using linked administrative health data. Outcomes were child mortality, hospital admissions, and emergency department (ED) presentations up to five years old. Grandparental health when the child was born was categorised as healthy (none/one Elixhauser condition), unhealthy (two or more conditions), or deceased. Grandparental-child health associations were estimated using regression with adjustment for birth year, sex, remoteness, socioeconomic advantage, maternal smoking, and maternal age. 29,409 Aboriginal children linked to their maternal grandmothers. 70% also linked to maternal grandfathers, 66% to paternal grandmothers, and 49% to paternal grandfathers. 86% of maternal grandmothers were healthy, 7% unhealthy, and 7% deceased. Children with healthy grandmothers had an average of 27% fewer hospital days (adjusted incidence rate ratio: 0.73, 95% CI: 0.65, 0.83) than those with deceased grandmothers. They also had lower mortality and fewer potentially avoidable admissions and emergency department presentations. Children with unhealthy or deceased grandmothers had comparable rates. These patterns were similar for all four grandparents, but generally stronger for maternal grandmothers. Stillbirth and unavoidable admissions were unrelated to grandparental health. Aboriginal children with healthy grandparents had better health and lower health service use. If this relationship is causal, healthy ageing and strong family connections must be supported to improve child health. Even if the relationship is not causal, healthy ageing, a family-centred approach to health care, and social support may help families experiencing poor health in multiple generations simultaneously.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being
#10 Reduced Inequalities

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Domestic collaboration
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4 Electrical Engineering, Electronics & Computer Science
4.48 Knowledge Engineering & Representation
4.48.2210 Entity Resolution
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Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
ESI research areas
Social Sciences, general
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