Data released from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), National Health Survey, 2022Â
provides a snapshot of Australian’s health.
The proportion of adult current daily smokers has more than halved over the last twenty years, from 22.4 per cent in 2001 to 10.6 per cent in 2022, according to data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).
Robert Long, ABS director of health statistics, said; “Almost three in five or 58.3 per cent of adults had never smoked, which has gone up in the last decade from 51.1 per cent in 2011–12.
“One in seven adults had used e-cigarettes and vaping devices at least once in their life.”
Mr Long said that the first release of the National Health Survey 2022 offered insights into how the health of Australians has changed over time.
Eight in ten Australians (81.4 per cent) had at least one long-term health condition, and half (49.9 per cent) had at least one selected chronic condition.
“Three in four adults with high measured blood pressure did not report having hypertension. This suggests that many people with high measured blood pressure remain undiagnosed,” Mr Long said.
More than one in four adults (26.8 per cent) exceeded the Australian Adult Alcohol Guideline, reporting that they drank more than 10 standard drinks a week and/or 5 or more drinks on any one day at least monthly. Young adults aged 18–24 years were more likely than any other age group to exceed this amount, with over one in three (36.1 per cent) exceeding the guideline in 2022.
More than four in ten adults (44.1 per cent) were eating the recommended daily intake of fruit, but only 6.5 per cent ate the recommended daily intake of vegetables.
Almost twice the proportion of adults reported that they do not usually eat fruit daily in 2022 when compared to over a decade ago – up from 6.3 per cent in 2011–12 to 12.0 per cent in 2022.
“On average, we were doing 69 minutes of physical activity every day and nearly half of us spent most of our work day sitting,” Mr Long said.
More information can be found from the National Health Survey topic on the ABS website.