Baby length of stay in hospital
Babies’ length of stay refers to the number of days between the date of birth and the date of discharge. Data on length of stay are based on liveborn babies who were born in hospital and were discharged home and excludes data from Western Australia.
In 2020, 7.1% of babies of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mothers had a stay of less than 1 day, 70% had a stay of 1-3 days, 13% had a stay of 4-6 days and 9.1% had stay of 7 days or more (compared with 5.2%, 66%, 25% and 4.6%, respectively, of babies of non-Indigenous mothers).
Between 2010 and 2020 the length of stay for babies of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mothers has shortened, with an increase in hospital stays of 3 days or less (from 70% in 2010 to 77% in 2020) and a decrease in hospital stays of 4 days or more (from 29% in 2010 to 23% in 2020).
There were changes during this period for stays of less than 1 day (from 4.8% in 2010 to 7.1% in 2020), 1-3 days (from 65% in 2010 to 70% in 2020), 4-6 days (from 20% to 13%). Hospital stays of 7 days or more fluctuated, ranging from 10% to 8.9%.
The data visualisation below shows the proportion of liveborn babies of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mothers and non-Indigenous mothers who were born in hospital and discharged home by grouped length of stay in hospital from 2010, and the proportion of liveborn Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander babies and non-Indigenous babies who were born in hospital and discharged home by grouped length of stay in hospital from 2013.