Hospital services
The NIHSI contains de-identified records from 2010–11 to 2020–21 for emergency department and admitted patient care:
- National Hospital Morbidity Database (NHMD) – public hospital admitted patient separations in 6 participating states/territories (NSW, Victoria, South Australia, Queensland, Tasmania and the ACT) and separations for private hospitals (where available) for Victoria (2010–11 to 2016–17), the ACT (2010–11 to 2018–19) and Queensland (2010–11 to 2020–21). Supplementary codes for chronic conditions are available from 2015–16 to 2020–21.
- National Non-Admitted Patient Emergency Department Care Database (NNAPEDC) – emergency department (ED) presentations in the 6 participating states/territories as above.
Since private hospital separations were not available for all states/territories, the analysis of hospital services only included public hospital episodes.
Treatment of admitted patient and emergency department data
Hospital data are episodic in nature, meaning that, while from the person’s perspective they may have had one hospital stay with some moves between hospitals, wards or wings, from a data collection perspective the patient had several adjoining individual episodes of care with an admission date and separation date for each (referred to here as ‘hospital episodes’). This is useful for measuring activity in the system but does not readily capture a full hospital stay.
To represent hospital care from the patient’s perspective, the analyses were based on a set of rules to combine individual hospital episodes into distinct hospital stays. Episodes belonging to the same person were identified using the unique person identifier obtained through the data linkage process. This information, along with data on episode start and end dates and modes of admission and discharge, allowed hospital episodes for an individual to be combined into one hospital stay, from first admission to final discharge.
The steps used to combine hospital episodes into hospital stays are outlined in more detail in a previous report, Younger onset dementia - New insights using linked data: Technical document (AIHW 2022).
Reasons for ED presentation
There are known gaps in the completeness of ED data relating to dementia (AIHW 2020). The major diagnostic block category was the most complete field available for exploring the reasons for ED presentation. The principal and additional diagnosis codes for dementia were also analysed (see Table 1), but counts were small and are only presented for some of the larger geographies. The report simplified the reasons for ED presentation into plain English terms (Table 8).
Two-character diagnoses | Urgency related major diagnostic block classification | Terminology in this study |
---|---|---|
2A | Injury, multiple sites | Injury |
2B | Injury, single site, major | Injury |
2Ba | Injury, single site, minor | Injury |
3A | Circulatory system illness | Circulatory diseases |
3B | Respiratory system illness | Respiratory diseases |
3E | Neurological system illness | Nervous system disease |
Note: For complete list of urgency related group major diagnostic block codes see https://meteor.aihw.gov.au/content/684509
Principal diagnoses
The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) is the World Health Organization’s internationally accepted classification of diseases and related health conditions. The 10th revision, Australian modification (ICD-10-AM) is used in this analysis. The principal diagnosis is the condition or cause that, after study, was established as the reason for the person needing care. Diagnoses are captured slightly differently between various hospitals or hospital systems (using various editions of ICD-10-AM, ICD-9-Clinial Modification and SNOMED CT-AU), but these can be mapped to the ICD-10-AM.
The principal diagnoses reported here use the ICD-10-AM diagnosis codes. Each code identifies particular conditions, symptoms, abnormal findings or causes, and the chapters in ICD-10-AM group these into broad categories. The report simplified the most common reasons into plain English terms that each correspond to a chapter, except Dementia or delirium which is reported as a separate category from Mental and behavioural disorders and Nervous system diseases (Table 9).
Chapter | Disease classification | ICD diagnosis codes within range | Report terminology |
---|---|---|---|
6 | Diseases of the nervous system (excluding dementia or delirium) | G00-G99 (excluding G30, G31) | Nervous system diseases |
6 | Dementia or delirium | F00, F01, F02, F03, F05, F107, F137, F187, G30, G31 and R41 | Dementia/delirium |
9 | Diseases of the circulatory system | I00-I99 | Circulatory diseases |
10 | Diseases of the respiratory system | J00-J99 | Respiratory diseases |
19 | Injury, poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes | S00-T99 | Injury |
Note: Analysis of total hospital stays excluded dialysis (ICD-10-AM ‘Z49’). Further information is available at: Episode of care—principal diagnosis, code (ICD-10-AM 10th edn) ANN{.N[N]} (aihw.gov.au).
AIHW (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare) (2020) Dementia data gaps and opportunities, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 30 August 2023.
AIHW (2022) Younger onset dementia – new insights using linked data, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 1 December 2022.