Overview
Chronic diseases are long lasting conditions with persistent effects. Their social and economic consequences can impact on peoples’ quality of life. Chronic conditions are becoming increasingly common and are a priority for action in the health sector. Many people experience multimorbidity – the presence of 2 or more chronic conditions in a person at the same time.
The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) commonly reports on a wide range of chronic conditions:
Featured summaries
These chronic conditions tend to be common, pose significant health problems, and, in many instances, action can be taken to prevent their occurrence.
A disease is defined as a physical or mental disturbance involving symptoms (such as pain or feeling unwell), dysfunction or tissue damage that may lead to ill health. Diseases can be acute (coming on sharply, often brief, intense and/or severe) or chronic (long-lasting with persistent effects ranging from mild to severe) or, in some cases, both. Common features of chronic diseases include:
- complex causality, with multiple factors leading to their onset
- a long development period, for which there may be no symptoms
- a prolonged course of illness, perhaps leading to other health complications
- associated functional impairment or disability.
Chronic diseases can range from mild to more significant conditions and include:
- cardiovascular conditions (such as coronary heart disease and stroke)
- cancers (such as lung and colorectal cancer)
- mental disorders (such as depression)
- diabetes
- respiratory diseases (including asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)
- arthritis, osteoporosis and other musculoskeletal conditions
- chronic kidney disease
- oral diseases (such as tooth decay and gum disease).
Changes to our lifestyles and reduction in other diseases in the last hundred years have meant that chronic diseases are increasingly common and now cause most of the burden of ill health. In addition to the personal and community costs, chronic diseases result in a significant economic burden because of the combined effects of health-care costs and lost productivity from illness and death. A key focus of the Australian health system, therefore, is the prevention and better management of chronic disease to improve health outcomes.
More information including our most recent data: Chronic conditions
Featured reports
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Endometriosis
Web report |
Latest findings
18 out of every 1,000 hospitalisations among females aged 15–44 were related to endometriosis
The median age of endometriosis-related hospitalisations is decreasing
The rate of endometriosis hospitalisations has doubled among females aged 20–24 in the past decade
2.7% of people aged 35 and over at 30 June 2019 had used health services for COPD in the year prior
COPD prevalence was highest in areas of highest disadvantage (3.8%) among people aged 35 and over at 30 June 2019
COPD prevalence at 30 June 2019 was 2.8% for men and 2.6% for women, for those aged 35 and over
The AIHW manages the National Centre for Monitoring Chronic Conditions (NCMCC) to provide a ‘bigger picture’ of chronic conditions in Australia.
More reports and statistics on chronic disease can be found under Burden of disease, Biomedical risk factors and Life expectancy & deaths.