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Admission rates, multiple admissions per individual and time spent in hospital in general medical and geriatric care are described using data from the Oxford Record Linkage Study from 1968-86. For patients aged 15-39 years, age-specific admission rates did not vary appreciably with age and were a little higher in women than in men. For patients aged 40 years and over, admission rates rose steeply with age and were considerably higher in men than in women. Admission rates, measured as episodes, increased over time by 3.4% per year in women and 3.7% in men. Measured as individual people admitted per year, they increased by 2.2% per year people in women and 2.6% in men. Expressed as age-standardized rates, they increased by 1.5% per year in women and 1.8% in men. The greater rise in episodes than in people treated reflected an increase in repeat admissions per patient admitted. Mean length of stay per hospital episode and total time spent in hospital per patient admitted per year both showed a consistent decline over time. Increases in admission rates were seen in all of the common broad clinical groupings studied, except infectious diseases which, as a group, showed a mean annual decrease of just over 2% per year.

Type

Journal article

Journal

QJM : monthly journal of the Association of Physicians

Publication Date

09/1995

Volume

88

Pages

649 - 659

Addresses

Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Oxford, UK.

Keywords

Humans, Hospitalization, Length of Stay, Patient Readmission, Medical Record Linkage, Geriatrics, Specialties, Medical, Age Distribution, Sex Distribution, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Middle Aged, Workload, England, Female, Male