Definition
Indicator Summary
Participants in the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) Patient Experience Survey 2011–12 who reported that they went to any hospital emergency department for their own health in the preceding 12 months
The numerator refers to the number of adults who were admitted to any hospital emergency department for their own health in preceding the 12 months.
The numerator was calculated …
Calculation rules
- Description
Participants in the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) Patient Experience Survey 2011–12 who reported that they went to any hospital emergency department for their own health in the preceding 12 months
The numerator refers to the number of adults who were admitted to any hospital emergency department for their own health in preceding the 12 months.
The numerator was calculated as the sum of calibrated sample weights for persons aged 15 years and over who responded that they went to any hospital emergency department for their own health in the preceding 12 months and who were enumerated within the particular Medicare local catchment.
Population is limited to persons aged 15 years and over.
The denominator was calculated as the sum of calibrated sample weights for persons aged 15 years and over who were enumerated within the Medicare Local catchment.
Person level survey weights were calibrated to independent estimates of the population of interest, referred to as 'benchmarks'. Weights calibrated against population benchmarks ensure that the survey estimates conform to independently estimated distributions of the population, rather than to the distribution within the sample itself. These benchmarks account for the distribution of people across state and territory, age group, and sex categories. Note: These benchmarks have not been calibrated for Medicare Local geography.
Analysis by remoteness and Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) Index of Relative Socio-Economic Disadvantage (IRSD) is based on usual residence of the person.
The measure is presented as a percentage.
95% confidence intervals and relative standard errors are calculated for rates.
All point estimated percentages had a confidence interval width less than 20 percentage points. Point estimate percentages between 5% and 15% or between 85% and 95 are only included if their confidence interval width was less than 15 percentage points. Point estimate percentages that were less than or equal to 5% or greater than or equal to 95% were included if the confidence interval width was less than 10 percentage points. Some Medicare Local catchments (having a small point estimate percentage) were included where the confidence interval width was less than 10 percentage points.
Comments
Origin:
Healthy Communities
References
This content Based on Australian Institute of Health and Welfare material. Attribution provided as required under the AIHW CC-BY licence.
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