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Percentage of emergency admissions to any hospital in England occurring within 30 days of the last, previous discharge from hospital after admission: indirectly standardised by age, sex, method of admission and diagnosis/procedure.
Please note: The data originally published in April 2024 contained an error. There were 2 sets of data values for the Upper tier local authority "Cornwall and Isles of Scilly" for the time period 2013/14 quarter 4. The erroneous data values were removed from the file in an update released in May 202...
The indicator measures the number of emergency admissions to hospital in England for acute conditions such as ear/nose/throat infections, kidney/urinary tract infections and angina, among others, that could potentially have been avoided if the patient had been better managed in primary care.
This indicator measures how many young people (aged 0-18 inclusive) who have asthma, diabetes or epilepsy are admitted to hospital in an emergency.
This indicator measures how many people with specific long-term conditions, which should not normally require hospitalisation, are admitted to hospital in an emergency. These conditions include, for example, diabetes, epilepsy and high blood pressure.
Due to a change to the software used by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) to code deaths data from 2014 onwards, it was not possible to determine whether the count of deaths for secondary causes to skull fracture and intracranial injury or fracture of femur were comparable over the 2012-2014 or...
Mortality from skin cancers other than malignant melanoma (ICD-10 C44 equivalent to ICD-9 173).
Mortality from skin cancers other than malignant melanoma (ICD-10 C44 equivalent to ICD-9 173).
Mortality from skin cancers other than malignant melanoma (ICD-10 C44 equivalent to ICD-9 173).
Mortality from skin cancers other than malignant melanoma (ICD-10 C44 equivalent to ICD-9 173).