ARACY Report Card on the Wellbeing of Young
Australians
The ARACY Report Card presents a summary of the wellbeing of
Australia's young people. It provides an international perspective and
sets a
baseline for future monitoring. The Report Card has eight domains on
the health and wellbeing of young Australians.
- Material wellbeing
- Health and safety
- Education, training and employment
- Peer and family relationships
- Behaviours and risks
- Subjective wellbeing
- Participation
- Environment
Our report compares the Australian average, the Indigenous
Australian average and international or
OECD
(Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) performance.
It shows, that despite our economic prosperity, Australian
children do not perform as well as modern society would like to
think.
"Wake up Australia ... The
future health and wellbeing of the country depends on all of us taking
this very seriously."
Professor Fiona Stanley, AC, ARACY Board
Chair
Download the ARACY Report Card (1Mb PDF)
Download the full technical report (1.7Mb PDF)
For a hard copy of the technical Report Card, please contact us.
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Snapshot of Report Card:
- Australian children
were 12 times as likely to live in a jobless household as those in Japan
- Australia ranks
20th out of 27 nations for infant mortality. The infant mortality rate
for Indigenous Australians is more than double the non-Indigenous rate
- Teenage pregnancy
rates
for Indigenous young Australians are the highest in the OECD
- Youth road deaths
are 12 times higher than Portugal, and Australia's Indigenous young
people have a suicide rate second only to Finland
- Participation in
community activities by Australia's young people is strong
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| Material Wellbeing |
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This domain examines poverty and deprivation. For all indicators
in this area, Australia finished worse than the best international
result.
Indigenous Australians have a higher rate of reported deprivation
than the rate for the total Australian population.
Read more about Material
Wellbeing »
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| Indicators include: |
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Relative income poverty |
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Joblessness |
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Reported deprivation |
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| Health & Safety |
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The health and safety of children is a strong indicator of the
value a society places on children - and Australia's results
compare unfavourably internationally. Indigenous Australians have a
rate of death from self-harm second only to Finland.
Read more about Health
& Safety »
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| Indicators include: |
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Infant health |
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Immunisation |
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Mental health |
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Accidental injury |
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Child abuse & neglect |
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| Education, Training &
Employment |
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Education has a strong influence on the future outcomes of
children and young people and Australia fairs well in terms of literacy
and numeracy skills. But numbers show too many young Australians are
in neither work nor study.
Read more about Education,
Training & Employment »
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| Indicators include: |
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School achievement |
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Transition to employment |
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| Peer & Family
Relationships |
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Healthy relationships with families and peers help children to
develop strong social skills, resilience and self-esteem.
The biggest at risk population is 15-year-olds, who have one of the
lowest sense of belonging in the world.
Read more about Peer &
Family Relationships »
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| Indicators include: |
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Family relationships |
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Sense of belonging |
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| Behaviours & Risks |
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For indicators relating to cigarette smoking and teenage
fertility, Australia does not fare well. Compared to children
from many other OECD countries, young Australians are more likely to
misuse alcohol, use illicit drugs, and die in
road accidents.
Read more about Behaviours
& Risks »
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| Indicators include: |
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Obesity |
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Cigarette smoking |
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Teenage fertility |
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Crime |
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Illicit drug use |
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Road deaths |
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| Subjective Wellbeing |
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Subjective wellbeing is how children and young people feel about
themselves and their health.
It is an indication of their personal resources. Australian children
and young people rank fourth from 15 measured nations.
Read more about Subjective
Wellbeing »
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| Indicators include: |
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Self-reported health |
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| Participation |
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Participation in civic activities provides opportunities for the
development of new skills, community networks
and allows expression of opinions. Australia's children and young
people are active in the community.
Read more about
Participation »
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| Indicators include: |
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Community participation |
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| Environment |
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Australia has the third worst level of greenhouse gas emissions
from 30 OECD countries analysed.
Environmental degradation affects health and has socioeconomic
impact. Research shows climate change
is causing high levels of anxiety amongst young people.
Read more about
Environment »
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| Indicators include: |
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Climate change |
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Biodiversity |
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ARACY wishes to thank representatives of the following organisations
for their participation in the ARACY Report Card reference group:
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS)
Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER)
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW)
Australian National University (ANU)
Centre for Community Child Health, University of Melbourne (CCCH)
Centre for Developmental Health, Curtin University and the Telethon
Institute for Child Health Research
Social Policy Research Centre, University of NSW (SPRC)
Institute for Social Science Research, University of Queensland
(ISSR)
The Smith Family
University of Adelaide
UNICEF Australia