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ABS SOURCES OF DISABILITY DATA FOR THE ABORIGINAL AND TORRES STRAIT ISLANDER POPULATION
^ SURVEY OF DISABILITY, AGEING AND CARERS (SDAC) The most detailed and comprehensive source of disability data in Australia is the Survey of Disability, Ageing and Carers (SDAC). One of the main purposes of the SDAC is to collect extensive national and state level data on disability, and to provide accurate prevalence rates of disability for the total Australian population. The SDAC has been developed to align with international measures of disability as described in the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). It contains 168 screening questions to identify people with disability, and provides a wealth of detail on:
The survey also identifies carers, the nature of their role, their access to support and the impact of the caring role on their lives. One of the advantages of the survey is its coverage of non-private dwellings, including a separate component to collect information from health establishments.
Disability data for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population Disability data for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population is available from the SDAC since 2009, when the Standard Indigenous Question (SIQ) was first included in the survey. The SIQ was also included in the 2012 and 2015 SDAC, and will again be collected in the 2018 SDAC. Limitations of the SDAC The SDAC was not developed and tested to collect data for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population specifically; as such there are limitations in the collection of disability data for this population:
SDAC ‘Disability Status’ outputs The SDAC provides disability data by severity (see table below).
For a full list of the screening questions used in the SDAC to identify people with disability see Appendix: Disability screening questions from the Survey of Disability, Ageing and Carers.
^ SHORT DISABILITY MODULE (SDM) – THE NATSIHS AND NATSISS A short set of disability questions was developed for use in social surveys in the early 1990s, and various forms of these questions have been used since 1992. The standard Short Disability Module (SDM), as it has come to be known, was first used in the 2002 General Social Survey (GSS). This module was revised ten years later, with the current version of the SDM appearing for the first time in the 2012 Australian Health Survey (AHS). The questions used in the SDM are compatible with the Activities and Participation component of the International Classification of Functioning and are based directly on questions used in the SDAC. The criteria used in the SDM for identifying people with disability, and determining their severity of restriction, are closely aligned with the SDAC. However, unlike the SDAC where respondents are asked about each limitation or restriction separately, the SDM uses a condensed set of 16 broad questions that give a range of response options in the form of prompt cards. Disability data for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population The SDM, in the NATSIHS and NATSISS, provides an estimate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who report experiencing a restriction in their everyday activities. By identifying this population, it is possible to analyse the health, social and economic characteristics of this group, and compare these characteristics to those without restriction, both within the survey collection and across time. Inclusion of the SDM within the NATSIHS and NATSISS has developed over time:
These surveys differ from the SDAC as their samples and weights are designed to generate results representative of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population. Very remote areas of Australia and discrete Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities are included within the scope of these collections. For a detailed look at the disability measures available from all NATSIHS and NATSISS collections, see Appendix: The Short Disability Module in ABS National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander household surveys. SDM ‘Disability Status’ outputs The standard SDM allows for the following severity of disability measures to be output (see table below). These measures are intended to be broadly comparable to those collected in the SDAC.
(b) 2012-13 NATSIHS remote data may include persons who have ‘mild core activity limitation’ (c) Only available in the 2014-15 NATSISS
For a full list of the SDM questions and prompt cards used in the 2012-13 NATSIHS and 2014-15 NATSISS, and how responses to these questions are used to classify people’s severity of disability, see Appendix: Short Disability Module Questions: 2012-13 NATSIHS and 2014-15 NATSISS. Limitations of the SDM The SDM was designed to be included in household surveys in order to provide insights into aspects of life that the SDAC does not examine, however users need to be aware of the limitations of the SDM. Capturing the full complexity of disability and accurately assessing the full range of disability severity using only a small number of questions is very difficult. The SDM has been designed to collect disability measures that align with the SDAC, however, users need to be aware that the SDM cannot provide the same accuracy as the SDAC, due to the limited number of questions.
^ CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING The Census of Population and Housing is Australia’s largest statistical collection. The collection provides an estimate of Australia’s population, which is used to set electoral boundaries for all levels of government, underpins the distribution of significant public funding and informs planning for services and infrastructure across every community in Australia. The Census is the only ABS collection that can provide data for the entire country, including small geographic areas and small population groups. The complexity of disability service provision means that there is always a high level of demand for small area disability data. In response, the ABS developed a measure of disability for use in the 2006 Census of Population and Housing. The Census ‘Need for Assistance’ disability measure is based on 4 questions and has been designed to be both conceptually comparable to the SDAC, and practical for use in a national Census. The Census questions are based on the SDAC measure of combined ‘profound or severe core activity limitation’, the population for whom service delivery has the most consequence. Disability data for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population The ‘Need for Assistance’ questions and the SIQ were included in the 2006, 2011 and 2016 Census collections. Disability measures for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with profound/severe core activity limitation are available from these three Census years. Census ‘Need for Assistance’ outputs The first three disability questions asked in the Census identify people who have need for assistance with one or more core activity areas (self-care, communication or mobility). The fourth question identifies the reasons as to why this assistance was necessary; as a result of disability, a long-term health condition or the effects of old age. The table below shows the disability measures available from the Census ‘Need for Assistance’ module.
(a) The ‘Has need for assistance with core activities’ measure is conceptually equivalent to the combined ‘profound/severe core activity limitation’ measure available in the SDAC and SDM
For more information on the ‘Need for Assistance’ questions, and how responses are used to determine whether a person has a need for assistance, see Appendix: Census Core Activity Need for Assistance Topic. Detailed information on the ‘Need for Assistance’ measure is available in the information paper Disability Variables, 2006 (cat. no 1200.0.55.001). Limitations of the Census ‘Need for Assistance’ measure
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