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Cardiovascular disease, diabetes and renal disease are understood to be part of a “metabolic syndrome” with similar underlying causes

In general, rates of communicable disease are markedly higher in Indigenous compared to non-Indigenous people. Particularly high rates have been observed for tuberculosis, meningococcal infection, syphilis and gonococcal infection

Incidence rates for cancer are relatively low for Indigenous males compared to non-Indigenous males. However, incidence rates of cancer in Indigenous females are very similar to that for non-Indigenous females. The higher mortality rates among Indigenous people are a result of more advanced tumours at the time of diagnosis, and lower survival rates for primary cancers

Lung, cervical and liver cancer are particularly high among Indigenous people