Substance misuse in Aboriginal Australians
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Addiction Biology
- Vol. 3 (1) , 29-46
- https://doi.org/10.1080/13556219872326
Abstract
Australia's Aborigines lived in isolation from the rest of humanity as successful hunter‐gatherers for tens of thousands of years. That isolation ended abruptly with British colonization in the late 18th century and was followed by a traumatic 200 years for Aborigines who are now seriously disadvantaged, socio‐economically and in terms of their health standards. It has often been assumed that the Aborigines had no access to psychotropic substances before permanent European contact but several pieces of evidence dispute this view. The history of Aboriginal contact with and usage of intoxicating substances, including alcohol, is extremely complex and affected by a maze of restrictive government policies. These interact with a wide range of other Federal and State policies which have changed rapidly since the late 1960s when Aborigines were first granted the franchise; access to unrestricted drinking followed soon afterwards. Today Aborigines suffer disproportionately to other Australians from the physical and social consequences of excess alcohol consumption, tobacco usage, petrol and other solvent sniffing, usage of marijuana, amphetamines, cocaine and heroin, as well as other drugs. The Aboriginal population is dispersed in cities, towns, fringe settlements, rural and remote areas over this vast continent and there are different patterns of drug usage from place to place. This review attempts to synthesize some of this information in order to give an overview to the history, background, current status of substance misuse by Aborigines as well as some strategies being used to try to overcome this serious problem.Keywords
This publication has 72 references indexed in Scilit:
- Culture in treatment, culture as treatment. A critical appraisal of developments in addictions programs for indigenous North Americans and AustraliansSocial Science & Medicine, 1995
- Aboriginal wellbeing and liquor licensing legislation in Western AustraliaAustralian Journal of Public Health, 1995
- The prevalence of drug use in urban Aboriginal communitiesAddiction, 1994
- Smoking in Aborigines and persons of European descent in southeastern Australia: prevalence and associations with food habits, body fat distribution and other cardiovascular risk factorsAustralian Journal of Public Health, 1992
- Hospital admissions of Aborigines and non-Aborigines in Western Australia, 1977–1988Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1992
- Stone agers in the fast lane: Chronic degenerative diseases in evolutionary perspectivePublished by Elsevier ,1988
- OCCURRENCE AND DISTRIBUTION OF HEPATITIS B INFECTION IN THE ABORIGINAL POPULATION OF WESTERN AUSTRALIAAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Alcohol Consumption and Alcohol‐Related Problems: Prevalence amongst a General Practice PopulationAustralian Drug and Alcohol Review, 1987
- Alcohol and Ethnography: A Case of Problem Deflation? [and Comments and Reply]Current Anthropology, 1984
- A hunger for stimuli: the psychosocial background of petrol inhalation*Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 1970