Privately funded hospital discharges – 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019

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Source: New Zealand Ministry of Health

These tables contain summarised data detailing privately funded hospital discharges and procedures by DHB, sex, age group and disease/procedure classification. The data is provided as excel tables and text files….

Please note:

  • The private hospital data included in this report is not complete, as not all private hospitals in New Zealand submit their data to the Ministry of Health.
  • We recommend that you do not compare the information presented for 2018/19 with previous publications in this series as data completeness varies each year.

Summary

These tables contain summarised data showing privately funded hospital discharges and procedures by DHB, sex, age group and disease/procedure classification. The same data is available in different formats:

  • Excel tables: Formatted tables so you can view national data easily and read the key findings.
  • Data tables: Zip file package containing text files of the underlying data used in the excel tables and a data dictionary. DHB breakdowns are available in this format. 

Key findings

Privately funded hospital discharges in 2018/19

  • More than 115,000 privately funded hospital discharges were reported in 2018/19; an age-standardised rate of 19 hospitalisations per 1000 people.
  • More than half of hospital discharges were for females (54%).
  • The age-standardised rate for females was 21% higher than the rate for males (21 discharges per 1000 females compared with 17 per 1000 males).
  • More than one third of all male discharges (37%) and one quarter of all female discharges (29%) were for those aged 65 years and over.
  • Age-specific rates among females of child-bearing age (15–44 years) were 1.7–2.0 times that of their male counterparts.

Privately funded hospital procedures in 2018/19

  • More than 240,000 privately funded hospital procedures were reported in 2018/19; an age-standardised rate of 41 procedures per 1000 people. 
  • More than half of hospital procedures were for females (56%). 
  • The age-standardised rate for females was 30% higher than the rate for males (46 procedures per 1000 females compared with 36 per 1000 males).
  • One third of all procedures performed on males (33%) and one quarter of all procedures performed on females (24%) were for those aged 65 years and over. 
  • Age-specific rates of procedures performed on females of child-bearing age (15–44 years) were 1.8–2.1 times that performed on their male counterparts.

MIL OSI

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