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joint strategic needs assessment foundation profile - JSNA

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Interative Hull Atlas: www.hullpublichealth.org/Pages/hull_atlas.htm More information: www.jsnaonline.org and www.hullpublichealth.org<br />

Area Total three year admissions and annual average<br />

DSR per 1,000 Hull residents (under 19s accidents),<br />

2007/08 to 2009/10 (95% CI)<br />

Males under 19 yrs Females under 19 yrs<br />

N DSR N DSR<br />

St Andrew's 68 20.8 (16.1 to 26.4) 25 7.7 (5.0 to 11.5)<br />

Area: Riverside (West) 216 16.5 (14.3 to 18.8) 112 8.9 (7.3 to 10.7)<br />

Boothferry 68 15.4 (12.0 to 19.6) 33 8.1 (5.6 to 11.4)<br />

Derringham 54 14.1 (10.6 to 18.4) 35 9.8 (6.9 to 13.7)<br />

Pickering 87 19.6 (15.7 to 24.2) 46 11.6 (8.5 to 15.5)<br />

Area: West 209 16.4 (14.3 to 18.8) 114 9.8 (8.1 to 11.8)<br />

Avenue 52 12.5 (9.4 to 16.5) 36 9.1 (6.3 to 12.6)<br />

Bricknell 34 10.4 (7.2 to 14.5) 13 5.3 (2.8 to 9.0)<br />

Newland 53 18.5 (13.8 to 24.3) 29 9.6 (6.4 to 13.8)<br />

Area: Wyke 139 13.8 (11.6 to 16.3) 78 8.1 (6.4 to 10.2)<br />

Locality: West 564 15.7 (14.4 to 17.0) 304 9.0 (8.0 to 10.1)<br />

HULL 1,578 15.9 (15.1 to 16.7) 787 8.4 (7.9 to 9.1)<br />

Following the change in the government in May 2010, new outcomes are now under<br />

consultation (see section 3.3.6.2 on page 52). One of the outcomes proposed is the<br />

hospital admission rate caused by unintentional and deliberate injuries to those under 5<br />

and 5-18 years, but it is not yet known if these will become new outcome measures.<br />

10.11.1.2 Mortality<br />

From the Compendium, the number of accidental deaths to children and young people<br />

aged 1-14 years is very small for most PCTs (generally less than three) and due to<br />

confidentiality reasons cannot be presented. For Hull, there were fewer than three<br />

deaths registered during 2008 where the cause of death was listed as accidental<br />

(International Classification of Disease codes V01-X59).<br />

10.11.1.3 Inpatient Admissions in Relation to Deprivation<br />

Figure 248 illustrates the average annual directly age-standardised daycase and<br />

inpatient admission rates which involve a primary or secondary diagnosis of accidents<br />

(any clinician episode within that hospital stay) by local deprivation quintile over three<br />

financial years 2007/08 to 2009/10 (standardised to Hull‟s 2009 population). The 95%<br />

confidence intervals are shown. The standardised admission rate in the most deprived<br />

quintile is 13.5 and is 14.3 admissions per 1,000 young people in the second most<br />

deprived quintiles compared to 11.0 and 10.0 per 1,000 young people in the second<br />

least and least deprived quintiles. Whilst the differences do not appear large, there is a<br />

statistically significant difference among the quintiles (the 95% CIs do not overlap). The<br />

underlying data are given in the APPENDIX on page 942.<br />

Joint Strategic Needs Assessment Foundation Profile – Hull Health Profile: Release 3. March 2011. 724

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