Emergency Hospital Admissions for Hip Fractures (age 65 and over)
Dataset for Emergency Hospital Admissions for Hip Fractures (age 65 and over). Data has been Directly Age-Standardised to the 2013 European Standard Population.
This dataset shows Emergency Hospital Admissions for fractured neck of femur, for persons Age 65 and over by Gender. The data source (Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID)) has indicated the following aspects in its commentary. Firstly, hip fracture is a debilitating condition - only one in three sufferers return to their former levels of independence, and one in three ends up leaving their own home and moving to long-term care. Hip fractures are almost as common and as costly to public services as strokes. Mortality from hip fracture is high - about one in ten people with a hip fracture die within a month, and about one in three die within a year. Within the 65 and over age group there are differences in hip fracture rates by Age and Gender. For data breakouts and more information please see the source link. Directly Age-Standardised Rates (DASR) are shown in the data (where numbers are sufficient) so that rates can be directly compared between areas. The DASR calculation applies Age-specific rates to a Standard European population to cancel out possible effects on crude rates due to different age structures among populations, thus enabling direct comparisons of rates. Source: Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID), Public Health Outcomes Framework (PHOF) indicator 4.14i (41401-E13). This data is updated annually.
Dataset for Emergency Hospital Admissions for Hip Fractures (age 65 and over). Data has been Directly Age-Standardised to the 2013 European Standard Population.
Metadata for Emergency Hospital Admissions for Hip Fractures (age 65 and over) dataset. This file contains Metadata (information about a dataset). It shows the schema for dataset fields and their contents. This file should be used along with the dataset, to aid correct interpretation of the data.
Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID) - data and profiles on key health issues. A Productive Healthy Ageing profile includes Falls and Fractures resources. For data and profiles of key health conditions in local areas, see the links for Local Authority Health profiles, and Local Health.
Key documents and information on the Health and Wellbeing of Lincolnshire’s population. Its resources include the Lincolnshire Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA).