1:26 pm today

One in six New Zealanders disabled, higher rates for some groups - Stats NZ

1:26 pm today
AUCKLAND, NZ - MAY 29:Traffic on Queen street  on May 29 2013.It's a major commercial thoroughfare in the Auckland CBD, New Zealand's main population center.

StatsNZ's latest data shows one in six New Zealanders live with an injury - about 17 percent of the population. Photo: 123rf.com

One in six New Zealanders are disabled - but the rate is significantly higher for the rainbow population and Māori, Stats NZ data has revealed.

Its 2023 Household Disability Survey found 10 percent of children and 18 percent of adults were disabled, totalling 851,000 people, or 17 percent of the population.

Stats NZ counted someone as disabled if they reported long-term difficulty with at least one of fourteen functions, which included senses, walking, flexibility, intellect, mental health, pain and fatigue. People were asked about difficulties seeing or hearing while using glasses or hearing aids.

Physical disabilities were the most common for adults, and mental health difficulties were most common for children, it found.

A higher rate of disability among adults was to be expected, said Stats NZ social and community spokesperson Nicolette Edgar.

"Illness, accidents, and the effects of ageing tend to increase the rates of disability later in life," she said.

A graph showing disability, age and gender for New Zealand's population.

Photo: Supplied/ Stats NZ

Nearly a third of the LGBTQI+ population reported a disability, the data showed.

They were more likely to have difficulty with cognition, mental health, socialising, fatigue, and sensory functions, StatsNZ said.

Disability rates were also higher for Māori (24 percent) and females (18 percent, compared to 15 percent of males).

Regions with disability rates significantly higher than the national rate were Northland (23 percent), Manawatū-Whanganui (21 percent), and Taranaki (21 percent).

But in Auckland the rate was significantly lower, at 14 percent.

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