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The indicators presented measure the percentage of emergency admissions to any hospital in England occurring within 30 days of the last, previous discharge from hospital backdated to 2014/15.
The Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) Enhanced Dataset (SCCI 2026) is a repository for individual level data collected by healthcare providers in England, including acute hospital providers, mental health providers and GP practices.
Latest publication: Female Genital Mutilation - Quarterly Report: April to June 2025
The Compendium mortality set publication has now been discontinued, please see the details below.
The Compendium hospital care set covers the following publications:
The Compendium set of Public health indicators covers the following publications: Abortions, Alcohol consumption, Births, Chromosomal abnormalities/congenital malformations, Circulatory diseases, Conceptions, Dental Health, Diabetes, Epilepsy, Fertility, General health, Immunisations and infectious diseases, Kidney/renal...
This indicator measures the counts and crude rates per 100,000 discharges of different primary diagnoses reported in the emergency readmission episode following a discharge that involved a specified diagnosis or procedure. Figures are reported at a national level.
Percentage of emergency admissions to any hospital in England occurring within 30 days of the last, previous discharge from hospital after a specific procedure indirectly standardised by age, sex and method of admission.
Percentage of emergency admissions to any hospital in England occurring within 30 days of the last, previous discharge from hospital with specific diagnosis: indirectly standardised by age, sex, method of admission and diagnosis group.
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.
Directly age standardised mortality rate from breast cancer for females in the respective time period per 100,000 registered female patients.