Aboriginal Health Effects

Words: 1798
Pages: 8

Impacts

There have been numerous studies conducted to outline the major negative health, physiological and physical outcomes among Indigenous adults who were removed from their families as children, as a result of the stolen generation. These negative disadvantages and social inequalities can be categorized into subgroups, these include: a reduced life expectancy, inequalities due to geographical location, cultural and structural discrepancies or ignorance’s such as having no cultural sensitivity to Aboriginal people’s specific needs, long terms effects, physiological effect, social effects, and experience a high rate of racism. These sub groups will now be discussed in detail
Indigenous Australians life expectancy has been drastically
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Showing results of being more likely to be a regular smoker, as well as more likely to develop a disability or long-term health condition, profound/severe core activity limitation and Psychological disabilities. Further studies have found that common outcomes of this extreme action included feelings of Isolation, depression, anxiety, loss of identity and feeling of not belonging anywhere. A lower level of education, increased racism due to stereotyping, they were twice as likely to be arrested and 3 times more likely to have been in jail, and twice as likely to use illicit …show more content…
And It was forced onto the Aboriginal people to act or be a certain/particular way. They were not allowed to speak their Indigenous language, they were separated from everything they have always known such as their land/home, culture, language, family, way of living and identity was taken away from them. This has been the cause of negative impacts on Aboriginal people. They were made to enact a way of living and being that was not their own, generally through cultural domination forced on them by the Australian society. The government and authorities used social cohesion to attempt to maintain and inforce their society the way they wanted it and expected everyone to conform to this idea. It is recalled that Ethnocentrism was integrated into society by the government and authorities’ views, beliefs and attitudes based on the assumption that the English culture, belief system and worldview of this group is superior to other groups/ cultures. This took place by viewing, judging and evaluating Aboriginals on the basis of one’s own culture. The social arrangements of Indigenous people were used as a reference point by which to measure the alleged inferiority of their culture. And assuming that one’s own culture is the most correct and valid way in which to