Page last updated1st June 2024

Looking for the latest information and statistics on other topics?

The Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet provides timely and accessible updates for those working and researching in the field of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health.
Overview Live:
Hospitalisation

Document details

[INSERT BLURB ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT]
Information current: 1st June 2024
Printed on: 13th September 2024
Live document: https://healthinfonet.ecu.edu.au/learn/health-facts/latest-information-and-statistics/hospitalisation/

The Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet

The Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet’s mission is to contribute to improvements in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health by making relevant, high quality knowledge and information easily accessible to policy makers, health service providers, program managers, clinicians and other health professionals (including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health workers) and researchers. The HealthInfoNet also provides easy-to-read and summarised material for students and the general community. The HealthInfoNet achieves its mission by undertaking research into various aspects of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and disseminating the results (and other relevant knowledge and information) mainly via the Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet websites  (https://healthinfonet.ecu.edu.au), The Alcohol and Other Drugs Knowledge Centre (https://aodknowledgecentre.ecu.edu.au) and Tackling Indigenous Smoking (https://tacklingsmoking.org.au). The research involves analysis and synthesis of data and information obtained from academic, professional, government and other sources. The HealthInfoNet’s work in knowledge exchange aims to facilitate the transfer of pure and applied research into policy and practice to address the needs of a wide range of users.

Recognition statement

The Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet recognises and acknowledges the sovereignty of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the original custodians of the country. Aboriginal and Torres Strait cultures are persistent and enduring, continuing unbroken from the past to the present, characterised by resilience and a strong sense of purpose and identity despite the undeniably negative impacts of colonisation and dispossession. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people throughout the country represent a diverse range of people, communities and groups each with unique identity, cultural practices and spiritualties. We recognise that the current health status of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people has been significantly impacted by past and present practices and policies. We acknowledge and pay our deepest respects to Elders past and present throughout the country. In particular, we pay our respects to the Whadjuk Noongar people of Western Australia on whose country our offices are located.  

Contact details

Director:Professor Neil Drew
Address:Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet
Edith Cowan University
2 Bradford Street
Mount Lawley, Western Australia 6050
Telephone:(08) 9370 6336
Facsimile:        (08) 9370 6022
Email:                            healthinfonet@ecu.edu.au
Web address: https://healthinfonet.ecu.edu.au

Hospitalisation

Statistics on hospitalisation provide some indication of the burden of disease in the population [24560]. They are, however, a poor reflection of the extent and patterns of treatable illness in the community because they only represent the most serious illnesses, which require hospitalisation [42101]. Hospitalisations are also influenced, to some extent, by the geographic accessibility of hospitals and variations in admission policies and practices for illnesses [35151][42009]. As is the case with other major health-related data collections (such as births and deaths), the identification of Indigenous status in hospital data collections is incomplete (see Appendix 1) [42009].

Another limitation of the available hospital statistics as an indicator of the health of the population, is that they relate to episodes of hospitalisation rather than to individual patients [35151][38411]. Also, it is difficult to analyse patterns of care for patients hospitalised multiple times (for example for kidney dialysis) from the current national hospitalisation data [35151][41516].

Hospitalisation rates will be determined by advancements in the health system [42101], improvements in self-identification by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people [25105], and reforms that tackle the social determinants of health [42101].

Hospital separation rates

Of the 12.1 million hospital separations in Australia[1], [2] during 2022-23, there were 656,760 (5.4%) identified as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander (Table 1) [41516]. Of these hospital separations, 91% were for Aboriginal people, 3.9% were for Torres Strait Islander people and 4.7% were for people who identified as being of both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent. Of the 656,760 hospital separations, 58% were for females and 42% for males.

In 2022-23, the overall age-standardised hospital separation rate for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was 914 per 1,000 (Table 1) [41516]. The highest age-standardised hospital separation rate was for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living in the NT (2,380 per 1,000) and the lowest in NSW (499 per 1,000).

Table 1. Numbers of hospital separations and age-standardised hospital separation rates for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, by jurisdiction, 2022-23

Jurisdiction Number Rate
NSW 127,806 499
Vic 40,331 682
Qld 190,465 963
WA 112,340 1,375
SA 38,015 1,034
NT 127,771 2,380
Australia 656,760 914

Notes:

  • Rates per 1,000 population.
  • Numbers and rates for the NT are for public hospitals only; numbers and rates are not included separately for public hospitals in Tas or the ACT but included in totals where applicable. The data are not published for confidentiality reasons and low numbers.

Source: AIHW, 2024 [41516]

For 2017-19, there were around 1.1 million hospital separations among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people at an age-standardised rate of 925 per 1,000 population (crude rate 656 per 1,000) [42101]. Dialysis accounted for 475,671 of these separations and when care involving dialysis was excluded, the age-standardised rate was 470 per 1,000 (crude rate 369 per 1,000).

Age-specific hospital separation rates

In 2017-19, age-specific hospital separation rates (excluding dialysis) for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people increased with age for males (except for 0-4 year olds), with the highest rate in the 65 years and over age-group (Table 2) [42101]. For females, rates increased with age (except 0-4 and 35-44 year olds), the highest rate, like their male counterparts, was in the 65 years and over age-group. For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females, the rates, compared with males, were higher across all age-groups from 15 to 64 years of age.

Table 2. Age-specific hospital separation rates (excluding dialysis), by sex, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, 2017-19

Age-group (years) Males Females Persons
0-4 358 284 322
5-14 115 103 109
15-24 162 399 277
25-34 242 565 402
35-44 384 550 469
45-54 532 567 550
55-64 652 661 657
65+ 965 935 948
All ages (age-standardised rate) 422 520 470
All ages (crude rate) 312 427 369

Notes:

  • Rates per 1,000 population.
  • Data includes public and private hospitals in all jurisdictions.
  • Age-standardised using the Australian 2001 standard population.

Source: AIHW, 2023 [42101]

Causes of hospitalisation

In 2022-23, the most common reason for the hospitalisation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Australia was for conditions in the ICD ‘Factors influencing health status and contact with health services’, mostly for care involving dialysis, responsible for 46% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander hospital separations (301,049 of 656,760 separations) [41516]. Many of these separations involved repeat admissions for the same people. The next ICD leading cause of hospitalisation for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was ‘Injury, poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes’ (including motor vehicle accidents, assaults, self-inflicted harm and falls) responsible for 43,070 hospital separations (6.6% of all separations) and ‘Symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings, not elsewhere classified’, responsible for 38,914 hospital separations (5.9% of all separations (Table 3).

Table 3. Numbers, proportions (%), and age-standardised hospitalisation rates for leading causes of hospital separations among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Australia, 2022-23

Principal diagnosis (ICD) Number of separations Proportion of separations (%) Age-standardised separation rate
Injury, poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes 43,070 6.6 51
Symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings, not elsewhere classified 38,914 5.9 50
Diseases of the digestive system 35,437 5.4 45
Pregnancy, childbirth and the puerperium 34,940 5.3 33
Diseases of the respiratory system 32,501 4.9 39
Mental and behavioural disorders 27,645 4.2 34
Diseases of the genitourinary system 19,366 2.9 26
Diseases of the circulatory system 18,439 2.8 30
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue 18,137 2.8 26
Endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases 13,789 2.1 19
Diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissue 13,273 2.0 16
Neoplasms 12,570 1.9 20
Diseases of the nervous system 10,121 1.5 13
Certain infectious and parasitic diseases 10,109 1.5 12
Factors influencing health status and contact with health services 301,049 46 476
All causes 656,760 100 921

Notes:

  • Hospital separation rates per 1,000 population.
  • Hospitalisation data for Tas, the ACT and the NT include only public hospitals.
  • Some principal diagnoses have been excluded.

Source: AIHW, 2024 [41516]

Potentially preventable hospitalisations

Potentially preventable hospitalisations are admissions which ‘could have potentially been prevented through the provision of appropriate individualised preventative health interventions and early disease management usually delivered in primary care and community-based care settings’ [42012]. Rates for potentially preventable hospitalisations, including those for chronic conditions, acute conditions and vaccine preventable conditions, may be used as an indirect measure of problems with access to care and effective primary care [39491].

In 2022-23, the age-standardised rate of overall potentially preventable hospitalisations for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was 66 per 1,000 [41516]. The highest rates for potentially preventable hospitalisations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were for chronic conditions: 31 per 1,000 (including 6.8 per 1,000 for diabetes complications) and acute conditions (28 per 1,000). The rate for vaccine preventable conditions was 9.5 per 1,000. Information by jurisdiction (Table 4) reveals that the NT had the highest rate for potentially preventable hospitalisations of 139 per 1,000, followed by WA of 86 per 1,000.

Table 4. Age-standardised hospital separation rates for selected potentially preventable hospitalisations for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, by condition type, by jurisdiction, all hospitals, 2022-23

NSW Vic Qld WA SA Tas ACT NT Australia
Vaccine preventable conditions 4.3 4.5 7.5 17 11 1.7 4.5 35 9.5
Acute conditions 18 21 33 34 27 14 25 53 28
Chronic conditions 21 30 33 38 36 16 20 59 31
Total 43 55 73 86 71 31 49 139 66

Note:

  • Rates are per 1,000 population.

Source: AIHW, 2024 [41516]

For 2022-23, age-standardised potentially preventable hospitalisation rates by remoteness indicated that vaccine preventable conditions, acute conditions and chronic conditions all experienced the highest rates in a remote setting (27, 47and 52 per 1,000 respectively) (Table 5) [41516]. When comparing between condition types and remoteness settings, vaccine preventable conditions had the greatest difference in rates between settings, with the rate for remote areas 4.1 times the rate for major cities (27 per 1,000 compared with 6.6 per 1,000 respectively) and 3.9 times the rate for regional areas (27 per 1,000 compared with 6.9 per 1,000 respectively).

Table 5. Age-standardised hospital separation rates for potentially preventable hospitalisations for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, by condition type, by remoteness, 2022-23

Major cities Regional Remote
Vaccine preventable conditions 6.6 6.9 27
Acute conditions 26 27 47
Chronic conditions 28 32 52
Total 60 65 121

Notes:

  • Rates are per 1,000 population.
  • Data are from public and private hospitals in all jurisdictions.

Source: AIHW, 2024 [41516]

[1] All hospitalisation data for Tas, the ACT and the NT includes only public [41516].

[2] 273,440 (2.3%) had no Indigenous status reported [41516].

References

Acknowledgement
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this website may contain images, voices and names of people who have passed away.
We respect your privacy. Your information is safe and will never be shared.
Don't miss out. Subscribe today.
×
×