ThickD_4_thickThighs
ThickD_4_thickThighs t1_ixa74ig wrote
Reply to comment by noogai131 in Indigenous people are less likely to survive the year after an ICU admission. 12 months after being admitted to intensive care, an Indigenous person is more likely to have died than a non-Indigenous person, according to Australian research. by MistWeaver80
If the label fits wear it, could not care less.
ThickD_4_thickThighs t1_ix88gsu wrote
Reply to comment by noogai131 in Indigenous people are less likely to survive the year after an ICU admission. 12 months after being admitted to intensive care, an Indigenous person is more likely to have died than a non-Indigenous person, according to Australian research. by MistWeaver80
Are we comparing indigenous healthcare in 1780s to European healthcare in 1780s when life expectancy in UK was 39 years?
We don’t know what outcome were for the indigenous because someone killed most of them before we could ask.
The fact you assume the subpar healthcare of “modern technology”(read: settler-colonial) is better with no evidence is what [insert your favorite adjective]-supremacist looks like.
A society run on that way of thinking is exactly why indigenous peoples have worse outcomes.
ThickD_4_thickThighs t1_ix75rlr wrote
Reply to Indigenous people are less likely to survive the year after an ICU admission. 12 months after being admitted to intensive care, an Indigenous person is more likely to have died than a non-Indigenous person, according to Australian research. by MistWeaver80
A settler colonial society’s healthcare system has worse outcomes for indigenous people? Pikachu is flabbergasted.
ThickD_4_thickThighs t1_ixa7gp5 wrote
Reply to comment by Pechumes in Indigenous people are less likely to survive the year after an ICU admission. 12 months after being admitted to intensive care, an Indigenous person is more likely to have died than a non-Indigenous person, according to Australian research. by MistWeaver80
Paper adjusts for > age, admission diagnosis, illness severity, hospital type, jurisdiction, remoteness and socio-economic status