4727.0.55.001 - Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey: First Results, Australia, 2012-13
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 27/11/2013 First Issue
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HOSPITAL VISITS AND ADMISSIONS
RESULTS FROM 2012–13 Visits to casualty/outpatients/day clinics In 2012–13, around one in twenty (6%) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people reported having visited casualty/outpatients/day clinics in the two weeks before the survey. Within the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population, the proportion of people accessing casualty/outpatients/day clinics ranged from 4% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children aged 0–14 years to 9% of those aged 55 years and over. CASUALTY/OUTPATIENTS/DAY CLINICS IN LAST TWO WEEKS, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people—2012–13 In the two weeks before the survey, similar proportions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in non-remote and remote areas had visited casualty/outpatients/day clinics (6% and 5% respectively). Hospital admissions Around one in five (18%) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people had been admitted to a hospital in the previous year. Generally, the proportion of people being admitted to hospital increased with age. Within the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population, the proportions of people who had been admitted to hospital in the previous year ranged from 11% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children aged 0–14 years to 27% of those aged 55 years and over. HOSPITAL ADMISSIONS IN LAST 12 MONTHS, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people—2012–13 Similar proportions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in non-remote and remote areas had been admitted to hospital in the previous year (18% compared with 20%). CHANGE OVER TIME Visits to casualty/outpatients/day clinics Between 2001 and 2012–13, the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who had accessed casualty/outpatients/day clinics in the previous two weeks decreased significantly from 8% to 6%. Hospital admissions In 2001 and 2012–13, the proportions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who had been admitted to hospital in the previous year were similar (19% and 18% respectively). HOW DO THESE RATES COMPARE WITH THE RATES FOR NON-INDIGENOUS PEOPLE? Due to methodological differences between the 2012–13 Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey and the 2011–13 Australian Health Survey, there are no directly comparable data for visits to casualty/outpatients/day clinics in the previous two weeks and hospital admissions in the previous year .
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