$8.5m to continue largest women's health study

Oct 23 2020

Australia’s largest and longest operating women’s health survey has secured $8.5m in funding.

The Federal Government Department of Health funding will support the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) for another three years.

ALSWH partners, the University of Newcastle and the University of Queensland, have collected important data on women’s health status and trends from across the nation since 1996.

The study follows more than 57,000 women who are broadly representative of the Australian population, spanning four generations.

HMRI researcher, Director of ALSWH, and Global Innovation Chair in Responsive Transitions in Health and Ageing at the University of Newcastle, Professor Julie Byles, said the funding guaranteed the survey would continue to track the health of Australian women.

“The importance of the research has come into even sharper focus during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the study being able to agilely study the impacts of the public response to COVID-19 in the short term, and to provide rigorous evaluation of the long-term effects on health care use and future health outcomes,” Professor Byles said.

During 2020, the ALSWH has conducted a series of surveys and reports on women's experiences of COVID-19. They include information on living arrangements during the pandemic, involvement in paid work and home-schooling, experiences of abuse, and general health and well-being. The studies show the stressors faced by women during the pandemic, and how these have affected their health risks.

ALSWH Deputy Director, University of Newcastle’s Professor Deb Loxton said the study offered insights into the health and well-being of Australian women across the lifespan.

“The ALSWH provides an evidence base for both policy and practice, and is a significant national resource,” Professor Loxton said.

Minister for Health, Greg Hunt, said the ALSWH study had been integral in guiding national approaches to developing services and supports that are tailored to women’s needs, and providing the best means of realising improved health outcomes for women, at all stages of their life.

The three original cohorts were women born in the years 1921-26, 1946-51 and 1973-78. A new cohort of more than 17,000 women born in the years 1989-95—who were then aged 18 to 23 years old — was added in 2013.

As well as continuing the study, the additional funding will finance a project to improve the representation of women from South East Asia, North East Asia, and Southern Asia. This will focus on women in the two younger cohorts, who are currently aged 25 to 31 years old and 42 to 47 years old.

ALSWH’s methodology is internationally-renowned and assesses:

  • Physical and emotional health - including well-being, major diagnoses, symptoms
  • Use of health services - GP, specialist and other visits, access, satisfaction
  • Health behaviours and risk factors - diet, exercise, smoking, alcohol, other drugs
  • Time use - including paid and unpaid work, family roles and leisure
  • Socio-demographic factors - location, education, employment, family composition.
  • Life stages and key events - such as childbirth, divorce, loss of partner, widowhood.
  • The impact of violence against women.

Data from the study is also made available for national and international research use. Since the study began, it has been used in more than 800 scientific publications.

* HMRI is a partnership between the University of Newcastle, Hunter New England Health and the community.