Health
Jun 03, 2026
Diphtheria Outbreak Exposes Australia's Health Inequality
A diphtheria outbreak in Australia has exposed significant health inequalities in Indigenous commun…
The Diphtheria Outbreak in Australia
The recent diphtheria outbreak in Australia should shock the nation, not just because a disease once considered virtually eradicated has returned, but because of where it is spreading and why. Over 220 cases have been recorded in 2026, primarily across the Northern Territory and northern Australia, with the overwhelming majority of patients being Aboriginal people, including those living in remote and very remote communities.
The Link to Poverty and Inequality
This outbreak is not isolated and is closely linked to overcrowded housing, poor environmental health conditions, and limited access to healthcare and healthy food in remote communities. These conditions allow diseases of poverty to persist in one of the richest countries in the world.
The Impact on Indigenous Communities
Across the NT, Aboriginal community-controlled health services continue to treat disproportionately high rates of communicable diseases such as rheumatic heart disease, skin infections, and scabies – all closely linked to overcrowding and poor environmental health. The climate crisis is intensifying many of these pressures in communities already facing housing stress and infrastructure shortages.
The Role of Aboriginal Community-Controlled Health Services
Aboriginal community-controlled health services have helped drive significant improvements in health, including in child health, antenatal care, and chronic disease treatment and prevention. Life expectancy has increased significantly over the past 20 years, by about nine years for Aboriginal men and five years for Aboriginal women.
The Need for Sustained Investment
However, this outbreak also shows the enormous pressures these services are under. A report commissioned by Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory in 2025 found that most Aboriginal health services in the NT had to reduce core services because of workforce shortages. The commonwealth's $7.2m emergency support package is welcome, but emergency responses are not enough.
The Way Forward
We cannot continue to wait until outbreaks escalate before investing in prevention, the workforce, and the living conditions that keep communities safe and healthy. This outbreak should trigger a serious process of reflection and learning for governments and health authorities, including examining the timeliness of the response, the coordination between agencies, and the role of public health systems.
#Australia
#Diphtheria
#Indigenous Health
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