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More than one in two Australians who have a long-term health condition or disability experiences social exclusion.

Poor health and disability are strongly linked to social exclusion in Australia. In measuring social exclusion from the latest data (2010) we found that 52% of Australians who have a long-term health condition or disability experience some level of exclusion. One in eight (13%) experience deep social exclusion.

Over the 2001–10 period we measured, the frequency of social exclusion among people with a long-term health condition or disability dropped from 61% to 52%. The frequency of deep social exclusion also fell, from 21% to 13%.

In the graph below, the ‘all social exclusion’ line shows the total of marginal social exclusion and deep social exclusion.

Graph of social exclusion for Australians with a long-term health condition or disability, 2001–10

To copy this graph for your own use, right-click on the image (or control-click on a Mac) and paste the graph into your document. Please credit 'The Brotherhood of St Laurence and the Melbourne Institute 2012'.

See data table for this graph and note on updated indicators.

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The social exclusion monitor is the work of the Brotherhood of St Laurence and the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research (MIAESR). This page was updated using analysis of Wave 10 of the HILDA Survey in November 2012.

A middle-aged man standing with a walking stick behind his daughter sitting on a red motorised scooter in his lounge room, a television is in the foreground and the open front door is in the background

Steve, in his 40s, has a debilitating illness. He is unable to work and has struggled to pay his family’s bills.

Read Steve’s story

 

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