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You are here: Home Reports & data Injury Hospitalisations due to falls in older people, Australia 2007-08
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Hospitalisations due to falls in older people, Australia 2007-08

Publication
Release Date: 01 Jun 2012
Topic: Injury
Media release

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AIHW

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2012) Hospitalisations due to falls in older people, Australia 2007-08, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 27 March 2023.

APA

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2012). Hospitalisations due to falls in older people, Australia 2007-08. Canberra: AIHW.

MLA

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Hospitalisations due to falls in older people, Australia 2007-08. AIHW, 2012.

Vancouver

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Hospitalisations due to falls in older people, Australia 2007-08. Canberra: AIHW; 2012.

Harvard

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2012, Hospitalisations due to falls in older people, Australia 2007-08, AIHW, Canberra.

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This report is the fourth in a series on hospitalisations due to falls by Australians aged 65 and older. It focuses on 2007-08 and includes estimates of the cost to the hospital system due to serious falls. As in the previous reports, most falls were sustained by females. About one-third of all cases were for injuries to the hip and thigh, and a fall on the same level due to slipping, tripping and stumbling was the most common cause of hospitalisation. Acute admitted patient care due to fall injuries in 2007-08 was estimated to have cost more than $648 million.

  • ISSN: 1444-3791
  • ISBN: 978-1-74249-303-9
  • Cat. no: INJCAT 137
  • Pages: 86
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Last updated 15/02/2018 v1.0

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