facts and figures
Despite being one of the most common of the serious chronic childhood diseases, juvenile arthritis is arguably one of the most under-recognised, misunderstood and neglected childhood diseases in Australia.
JAFA believes this may be due, at least in part, to the lack of accurate statistics on its prevalence, severity and associated impacts which can include permanent damage to joints and vision, psychological impacts, lost educational, employment and social opportunities, and negative economic impacts.
What we found
The available statistics on juvenile arthritis are incomplete, confusing and difficult to interpret.
Australia’s official data source for the nation’s health and illness status, the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), states that around 1 per 1,000 children aged from 0-15 years have juvenile arthritis. However, this omits 12 months as it defines juvenile arthritis as:
“a general term used to describe inflammatory arthritis in children that begins before the 16th birthday and lasts at least 6 weeks”.
In their 2010 article on Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis, Dr Christina Boros and Ben Whitehead, both respected Australian paediatric rheumatologists, propose that JIA occurs in between 1 and 4 cases per 1000 children.
While there seems to be general agreement that there are around 6,000 children in Australia with juvenile arthritis, it is difficult to determine if this figure refers to all the (approximately) 100 types of juvenile arthritis or if it refers mainly to Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. However, evidence cited in the NSW Model of care for the NSW Paediatric Rheumatology Workforce (2013) suggests that 3 in a 1,000 children have Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis and that there may be as many as 6.000 children and young people in NSW alone with childhood rheumatic diseases/juvenile arthritis.
Why is the lack of accurate data a problem?
The lack of accurate, coherent and comprehensive statistics on juvenile arthritis is an impediment to advocacy and to mounting a vigorous research effort. Without definitive data it is difficult to put a convincing case to Governments to invest in better services and more research into juvenile arthritis. And, without reliable baseline data, it is virtually impossible for medical and scientific paediatric rheumatology researchers to accurately assess changes in incidence and prevalence over time or to evaluate the outcomes of new treatments.
What does JAFA aim to do about this?
JAFA plans to:
Review the available statistics on what is known about the incidence and prevalence of juvenile arthritis and its complications in Australia. When this is done we’ll post it here for you see.
Raise funds to establish a juvenile arthritis register. There is an Australian Childhood Cancer Registry and diseases like cystic fibrosis and childhood diabetes have registers that enable accurate estimates of disease incidence and prevalence. Why not for juvenile arthritis?
The more we know the better we can do. The ultimate aim is to find ways of preventing and curing juvenile arthritis. After all what we want is…
A world where kids really don’t get arthritis.
Research
Coming soon