HMHDB Hospital Mental Health Services in Canada: Supplementary Tables
These data tables provide information on hospitalizations for mental illness or addiction, including separation volumes, hospitalization rates and lengths of stay.
These data tables provide information on hospitalizations for mental illness or addiction, including separation volumes, hospitalization rates and lengths of stay.
Interactive Wait Times tool to explore benchmarks for treatment and wait times across Canada.
Contains data on health spending in Canada by spending category and source of funding
Figures are based on the primary diagnosis or the diagnosis that contributed most to the patient’s length of stay during that hospitalization period.
CIHI’s surveys from 2003 to 2007 and 2009 to 2012 (only the 2012 survey data is shown in Quick Stats) tracked data on medical imaging equipment that was installed and operational in Canadian hospitals and free-standing imaging facilities (sometimes also called non-hospital, community-based and/or private facilities) as of January 1 of each year.
Many factors contribute to the observed variations in the analysis of indicators at the provincial/territorial and regional levels. These include, but are not limited to, geography, population health, provincial and regional health service resources, and environmental and socio-economic characteristics. It is important to consider these factors and the effect they may have on indicator results when conducting comparative analyses.
Number of newborn discharges-all records meeting the above inclusion criteria. Total length of stay-calculated by summing the length of stay for all records with a valid length of stay. Average length of stay-calculated by dividing total length of stay by number of discharges with a valid length of stay.
Number of inpatient surgical discharges.
The basic unit of observation is the discharge abstract or the record of an inpatient’s stay in a psychiatrici or general hospital. The discharge abstract is completed at separation (discharge or death). Records are grouped into fiscal years based on the inpatient’s date of separation from the hospital. If an individual was hospitalized more than once in the same fiscal year, a separate record for each stay was submitted. Hence the basic units of observation are events, not unique patients. If an inpatient was admitted prior to the beginning of a fiscal year, the days stayed prior to the year of separation are included in the total days stayed for that event.
Data tables for alcohol-attributable hospitalization from the report Trends in Income-Related Health Inequalities in Canada.
Data tables for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease hospitalization from the report Trends in Income-Related Health Inequalities in Canada.
Data tables for diabetes from the report Trends in Income-Related Health Inequalities in Canada.
Data tables for influenza immunization from the report Trends in Income-Related Health Inequalities in Canada.
Data tables for obesity from the report Trends in Income-Related Health Inequalities in Canada.
Data tables for obesity from the report Trends in Income-Related Health Inequalities in Canada.
Data tables for smoking from the report Trends in Income-Related Health Inequalities in Canada.
Data tables for traffic injury hospitalization from the report Trends in Income-Related Health Inequalities in Canada.
Learn about deprivation in Canadian cities.
An examination of whether Canada and the provinces have made progress in reducing socio-economic inequalities in health and well-being over the past decade.
Provincial summaries of the findings for each of the nine indicators in the Health Inequalities Interactive Tool.
Use CIHI's accessibility request form to request CIHI documentation in an accessible format.
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