AIHW Report on Australian Hospital Statistics 2012-2013 Now Available

By Petrina Smith
Thursday, 01 May, 2014


australian hospital statisticsThe  Australian hospital statistics 2012-13 report, released by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) shows same-day admissions are rising at a faster rate than overnight admissions.
The report shows there were almost 9.4 million hospital admissions in 2012-13-5.5 million in public hospitals and 3.8 million in private hospitals.
Between 2008-09 and 2012-13, same-day admissions rose by about 3.6% each year, compared with 2.7% each year for overnight admissions. Same-day admissions rose by 5% each year in private hospitals and 3% in public hospitals.
In the same period, subacute and non-acute admissions (such as rehabilitation care, palliative care and maintenance care) rose by an average of 13.7% each year for private hospitals and 8.2% a year for public hospitals.
'Private hospitals are providing more non-surgical care on a non-emergency basis. Admissions increased by 6.4% between 2008-09 and 2012-13, compared with 4.2% for public hospitals,' said AIHW spokesperson Nigel Harding.
There were 2.5 million admissions involving surgery in 2012-13. Of these, about 2 million were elective admissions and over two-thirds (67%) of these occurred in private hospitals.
'Indigenous Australians had a lower rate of elective surgery admissions compared with other Australians-58 per 1,000 people compared with 88 per 1,000,' Mr Harding said.
'With emergency admissions involving surgery, however, the admission rate for Indigenous Australians was about double the non-Indigenous rate at 27 per 1,000 people compared with 13 per 1,000 people.'
There were 746 public hospitals and 592 private hospitals in Australia in 2012-13.
Public hospitals spent over $42 billion in 2012-13. Spending on salaries (for about 274,700 employees) accounted for about 62% of recurrent expenditure.
'Public hospital expenditure rose by an average of 5% each year between 2008-09 and 2012-13, after adjusting for inflation,' Mr Harding said.
The Australian hospital statistics 2012-13 report also shows between 2008-09 and 2012-13, the number of full time equivalent salaried medical officers employed in Australia's public hospitals rose by about 4.8% on average every year, compared with 2.7% for nurses and 2.7% for staff overall

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