Re: Shawny’s concerns about Victorian and Australian Governments 
							
								 
							
							
								Reply #132 – 
							
							
						
						
No way to substantiate it?  Hospitals record whether patients are Indigenous and they record how long it takes for patients to be seen.  That's part of their reporting against performance indicators and closing the gap measures.  You can read all about the disparity in health care on the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare website.  For example:
"Between July 2019 and June 2021, the proportion of hospitalisations for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (First Nations) people that had a procedure recorded was 12 percentage points lower than for non-Indigenous Australians, based on age-standardised percentages (66% compared with 78%)."
Then there's the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care:
"The Board of St Vincent’s Hospital in inner Sydney monitors a number of indicators of quality of care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, including rates of incomplete treatment in the Emergency Department (ED). Incomplete treatment includes patients who leave the ED before the medical team recommends discharge, those who are not present when called to be seen by a doctor and those who attended ED and did not wait to complete treatment - collectively known as leave events.
Incomplete treatment is associated with an increased risk of readmission and death.1 The NSW Ministry of Health has identified the high rate of incomplete treatment in EDs among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander patients compared to other patients (8.6% and 6.1%, respectively, nationally, 2019)2 as a priority issue.
The hospital Board requested that the ED department work to reduce the rate of incomplete treatment among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander patients."
Hospitals and agencies charged with monitoring health care outcomes don't make figures up.  They report actual data.
You're right to some extent about data skewing "with First Nations males and females living in Major cities expected to live around 5 years longer than those living in Remote and very remote areas".  However, St Vincents and other hospitals are working off their own patient data and remote hospitalisations and outcomes don't come into it .  
And your assumption that the majority of Indigenous patients present for treatment in remote communities is incorrect.  NSW has the highest Indigenous population with 339,500.  Victoria is just ahead of the NT with 78,600 people to 76,700 and no communities in Victoria are considered to be remote.  
Yes, it would be good to know why Indigenous patients at St Vincents and other hospitals have longer wait times and higher rates of incomplete treatment.  More importantly, it's good that these issues have been identified and are being addressed.