Definition
Indicator Summary
Potentially avoidable general practitioner (GP)-type presentations are defined as presentations to public hospital emergency departments with a Type of visit of Emergency presentation where the patient:
- was allocated a Triage category of 4 or 5 and
 - did not arrive by ambulance or police or correctional vehicle and
 - was not admitted to the hospital, not referred to another hospital, or did …
 
Nationally by Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) Index of Relative Socioeconomic Disadvantage (IRSD) deciles (not reported this cycle).
2011–12 (updated for peer group), 2012-13—State and territory.
State and territory, by (all not reported this cycle):
- Indigenous status
 - remoteness (Australian Standard Geographical Classification Remoteness Structure)
 - SEIFA IRSD quintiles
 - peer group and triage category
 
Some disaggregations may result in numbers too small for publication.
Disaggregation by peer group is limited to Peer Groups A and B, as this is the scope of …
Calculation rules
- Description
 Potentially avoidable general practitioner (GP)-type presentations are defined as presentations to public hospital emergency departments with a Type of visit of Emergency presentation where the patient:
- was allocated a Triage category of 4 or 5 and
 - did not arrive by ambulance or police or correctional vehicle and
 - was not admitted to the hospital, not referred to another hospital, or did not die.
 
Limited to public hospitals in Peer Groups A and B.
To ensure comparability over time, emergency department activity at the Mersey Community Hospital is reported with Peer Group B hospitals for National Healthcare Agreement purposes. Whilst it is currently not a Peer Group A or B hospital, in the baseline year (2007-08) Mersey was a campus of the Peer Group B North West Regional Hospital and its emergency department activity was included in the baseline.
Analysis by state and territory, remoteness and Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) Index of Relative Socioeconomic Disadvantage (IRSD) is based on usual residence of person.
Presented as a number.
Nationally by Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) Index of Relative Socioeconomic Disadvantage (IRSD) deciles (not reported this cycle).
2011–12 (updated for peer group), 2012-13—State and territory.
State and territory, by (all not reported this cycle):
- Indigenous status
 - remoteness (Australian Standard Geographical Classification Remoteness Structure)
 - SEIFA IRSD quintiles
 - peer group and triage category
 
Some disaggregations may result in numbers too small for publication.
Disaggregation by peer group is limited to Peer Groups A and B, as this is the scope of the collection, and coverage varies for other hospitals by state and territory.
References
Related content
| Relation | Count | 
|---|---|
| Indicator Sets that include this Indicator | 0 | 
| Data Sets that are used in this Indicator | 0 |