Abstract

The high prevalence of preventable infectious and chronic diseases in Australian Indigenous populations is a major public health concern. Existing research has rarely examined the role of built and socio-political environmental factors relating to remote Indigenous health and wellbeing. This research identified built and socio-political environmental indicators from publicly available grey literature documents locally-relevant to remote Indigenous communities in the Northern Territory (NT), Australia. Existing planning documents with evidence of community input were used to reduce the response burden on Indigenous communities. A scoping review of community-focused planning documents resulted in the identification of 1120 built and 2215 socio-political environmental indicators. Indicators were systematically classified using an Indigenous indicator classification system (IICS). Applying the IICS yielded indicators prominently featuring the “community infrastructure” domain within the built environment, and the “community capacity” domain within the socio-political environment. This research demonstrates the utility of utilizing existing planning documents and a culturally appropriate systematic classification system to consolidate environmental determinants that influence health and disease occurrence. The findings also support understanding of which features of community-level built and socio-political environments amenable to public health and social policy actions might be targeted to help reduce the prevalence of infectious and chronic diseases in Indigenous communities.

Highlights

  • The quality of the places where people live and the opportunities places provide for making healthy choices shape people’s health behavior and their risk factors for health and disease [1]

  • The planning documents were distilled from an initial pool of 1722 records that included both academic journal articles and grey literature documents

  • Our findings show the distribution of socio-political environmental indicators were more prominent within the local implementation plan and regional plan documents, whereas the distribution of built environmental indicators were relatively higher in the community plan document compared to other document types

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Summary

Introduction

The quality of the places where people live and the opportunities places provide for making healthy choices shape people’s health behavior and their risk factors for health and disease [1]. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates about 22% of the global burden of disease, and 23% of all deaths are attributable to modifiable environmental. Blic Health 2021, 18, x FOR PEER REVIEW (a). Community infrastructure Housing Domain (N=7) Transportation Health Education.

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