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The Adult Social Care Outcomes Framework (ASCOF) measures how well care and support services achieve the outcomes that matter most to people. The ASCOF is used both locally and nationally to set priorities for care and support, measure progress and strengthen transparency and accountability.
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 Other indicator set covers the following publications: Area classification including deprivation, Education, Population, Social care, Socio-economic factors.
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.
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.