Dropping off the edge 2021 - Victoria
A report commissioned for VicHealth
Publisher
Poverty
Low socioeconomic status
Health inequity
Socio-economic disadvantage
Communities
Victoria
Description
VicHealth commissioned the Centre for Just Places to produce this report, which deep dives into locational disadvantage in Victoria, with a greater focus on health and wellbeing inequities.
This report, commissioned by VicHealth, presents Victoria-specific findings from Dropping off the Edge 2021 and has a particular focus on health and wellbeing inequities in Victoria. It includes an overview of the 40 locations experiencing the most disadvantage in Victoria, as well as a more detailed analysis across all indicators.
It also describes how disadvantage is concentrated in particular locations, how various forms of disadvantage overlap, and how multilayered disadvantage becomes difficult to escape.
Key findings:
- While most disadvantage was found outside Melbourne (25 of the 40 most disadvantaged areas on the index ranking, particularly in the north-west and far east of the state), some of the most extreme disadvantage was found within the capital. Six of the 10 areas of highest disadvantage were in Melbourne, a level of disadvantage not seen in other capital cities.
- The analysis of Victoria-specific findings profiled in this report has shown distinct health and wellbeing inequities as shown through the strong relationship between health indicators and overall disadvantage (including the proportion of people needing assistance with core activities; proportion of people receiving a support pension; and rates of intentional self-harm death per 1,000 population).
- Common challenges in locations experiencing multiple disadvantage in Victoria were jobless parents; low income; youth not in employment, education or training; and leaving school before Year 10.
Publication Details
Copyright:
Jesuit Social Services 2022
Access Rights Type:
open
Post date:
6 Jun 2024
