3321.0.55.001 - Drug Induced Deaths, Australia, 1991-2001
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 15/07/2003
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1. The source of data in this paper is the ABS Causes of Death data set, compiled from data provided by the Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages in each state and territory.
3. In this paper, deaths from 1991-1996 are classified according to the International Classification of Disease Ninth Edition (ICD-9), while deaths from 1997-2001 are classified according to the Tenth Edition (ICD-10). The ABS provides concordance and comparability factors to assist users with changes in coding between these two editions of the ICD (based on a sample of data that was coded to both ICD-9 and ICD10). These are published in ABS Causes of Death 2001 (cat.no 3303.0) and additional tables are available on request. In relation to drug-induced deaths, codes from ICD-9 and ICD-10 have been matched to facilitate comparisons over time, and a time series based on underlying cause of death due to drug use is possible from 1979. The following table lists the comparable ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes for drug-induced deaths.
4. The term 'drug-induced deaths involving opioids' (drug-induced deaths cross-classified with ICD-10 poison codes T40.0-T40.4, T40.6) has been used in this paper rather than heroin-induced deaths. Heroin is rapidly converted by the body into monocetyl morphine and then morphine. The presence of these drugs at the time of post-mortem may therefore indicate heroin use. However it is not possible to accurately distinguish the number of heroin deaths from those due to morphine or codeine. 5. Death rates are the number of deaths in a year expressed per 100,000 of the estimated resident population. 6. Standardised death rates enable the comparison of death rates between populations with differing age structures by relating them to a standard population. As explained in the ABS publication Deaths, Australia 2001 (cat. no. 3302.0) , "there are two methods of calculating standardised death rates:
7. Year of occurrence deaths are those registered within the occurrence year and the year immediately following. While some deaths are registered many years after they occur, analysis in Australia has shown that the number of deaths registered after the second year are of little significance (less than 0.1%) and do not affect any analysis. REFERENCES 1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2002), Australian Social Trends, 2001, cat. no. 4102.0. 2. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2002), Drug-induced Deaths - A Guide to ABS Causes of Death Data, cat. no. 4809.0.55.001. 3. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2002), 2001 National Drug Strategy Household Survey: Detailed Findings (Drug Statistics Series), cat. no. PHE 14, AIHW, Canberra. 4. Topp, L et al. (2002), Australian Drug Trends 2001: Findings of the Illicit Drug Reporting System (IDRS), National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre. Executive Summary available online at URL http://ndarc.med.unsw.edu.au/ndarc.nsf/website/Publications.monographs. Accessed on 11.04. 2003. 5. Weatherburn, D et. al. (2001), 'The Australian Heroin Drought and its Implications for Drug Policy', in Crime and Justice Bulletin, Number 59, October. 6. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2003), Statistics on Drug Use in Australia, 2002, Cat. No. PHE 43, AIHW. 7. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2002), Deaths, Australia 2001, cat. no. 3302.0. 8. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2001), Causes of Death, Australia 2001, cat. no. 3303.0. Document Selection These documents will be presented in a new window.
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