Injury Emergency Department Encounter Query Module Configuration Selection
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!*!*!*!*!*!*!*WILL BE BACK SOON!*!*!*!*!*!*!*[[br]]
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Overview
Click on either the Quick Selection or Advanced Selection bar to see a list of measures available. Use the hierarchical folder tree to navigate to the query module that will meet your needs. To see folder contents, click on the folder icon. Clicking on the folder again will hide the menu folder contents. When you click on the text link, it will take you to the query module. For further explanation on the modules, click on the "Help" button to the right.ICD-9-CM Injury Data
This IBIS-PH module queries injury data only. Data in this module are consistent with the injury case definitions found in the Consensus Recommendations for Using Hospital Discharge Data for Injury Surveillance (2003) developed by the State and Territorial Injury Program Directors Association (STIPDA) Injury Surveillance Workgroup, available at [http://ibis.health.utah.gov/pdf/resource/query/STIPDA.pdf] (see pages 7-11).ICD-10-CM Injury Data
This IBIS-PH module queries injury data only. Injury causes (step 2) and injury intention (step 3) in this module are consistent with the injury case definitions found in the Centers for Disease Control guidance, available at [https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/injury/injury_tools.htm]. Injury indicators (step 2) in this module are consistent with the Council for State and Territorial Epidemiologists toolkit, available at [https://resources.cste.org/Injury-Surveillance-Methods-Toolkit/Home/GeneralInjuryIndicators].
{{style color:red
!*!*!*!*!*!*!*POPULATION DATA ALERT!*!*!*!*!*!*!*[[br]]
On September 15, 2023, estimates for 2020 and later have been
updated to the IBIS Version 2022. For more information,
go to [http://ibis.health.utah.gov/query/PopEst.html].
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ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.ED Inpatient Admissions versus HDDB Inpatients
The HDDB includes all inpatient hospital admissions, some of which come from the ED, and others do not. There is a subset of patients, those who come in through the ED and are later admitted as an inpatient, who are in both datasets.Count of In-patient Admissions from ED Injury Encounters- Crude Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Length of Stay in Days
Total days stayed in hospital form the date of admission to the date of discharge.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Length of Stay in Days (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - Injury ED EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.ED Inpatient Admissions versus HDDB Inpatients
The HDDB includes all inpatient hospital admissions, some of which come from the ED, and others do not. There is a subset of patients, those who come in through the ED and are later admitted as an inpatient, who are in both datasets.Count of In-patient Admissions from ED Injury Encounters- Crude Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Length of Stay in Days
Total days stayed in hospital form the date of admission to the date of discharge.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Length of Stay in Days (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - Injury ED EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.ED Inpatient Admissions versus HDDB Inpatients
The HDDB includes all inpatient hospital admissions, some of which come from the ED, and others do not. There is a subset of patients, those who come in through the ED and are later admitted as an inpatient, who are in both datasets.Count of In-patient Admissions from ED Injury Encounters- Crude Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Length of Stay in Days
Total days stayed in hospital form the date of admission to the date of discharge.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Length of Stay in Days (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - Injury ED EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.ED Inpatient Admissions versus HDDB Inpatients
The HDDB includes all inpatient hospital admissions, some of which come from the ED, and others do not. There is a subset of patients, those who come in through the ED and are later admitted as an inpatient, who are in both datasets.Count of In-patient Admissions from ED Injury Encounters- Crude Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Length of Stay in Days
Total days stayed in hospital form the date of admission to the date of discharge.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Length of Stay in Days (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - ED EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.ED Inpatient Admissions versus HDDB Inpatients
The HDDB includes all inpatient hospital admissions, some of which come from the ED, and others do not. There is a subset of patients, those who come in through the ED and are later admitted as an inpatient, who are in both datasets.Count of In-patient Admissions from ED Injury Encounters- Crude Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
Length of Stay in Days
Total days stayed in hospital form the date of admission to the date of discharge.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Length of Stay in Days (sum) - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Length of Stay in Days - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Count - ED Injury Encounters
- Crude Rates - ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Injury Encounters
Charges, Costs, Expenditures
Charges are what is on the hospital bill. Not all charges get paid. For instance, oftentimes, Medicaid or an insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the charges, and then the hospital has to write off the rest. Charges are what is on the UB92 billing form, and is the only piece of information we have access to. Costs are harder to measure and not available. Expenditures are bound to be less than charges.Sum of Charges or Length of Stay in Days
Sum of Charges (sum):Sum of all hospital charges for selected inpatient hospitalizations or ED encounters.
Total Length of Stay in Days (sum): Sum of all days persons were hospitalized for selected inpatient hospitalizations.Total Charges (sum) - ED EncountersAverage Charges or Average Length of Stay in Days
Average Charges: Sum of total charges divided by number of releases or encounters.
Average Length of Stay in Days: Average number of days each individual was hospitalized for selected cause.Average Charge - ED EncountersMedian
The median is the midpoint value of a specific dataset. For example, the median age - or the age at which half the population is older and half is younger - is an indicator of the age composition of a population.When to Use Median
The median is a measure of central tendency that is not sensitive to extreme values. For instance, with hospital charges, there is a fixed "floor" value of zero, but on the other end, there will be a few very large values that will drive up the mean. The median is the 50th percentile, and is not sensitive to extreme values, so with data like charges, the median is a better measure of central tendency.Median Charge - ED Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Crude Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Crude Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Crude Rates - ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Crude Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Treat and Release Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Crude Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - Admissions from ED Injury Encounters
ED Treat and Release, Inpatient Admissions, and All Ecounters
Treat and Release: A patient that visits the ED, but is not admitted to the hospital as an inpatient. The patient does not stay overnight and is not admitted to another department of the hospital.
Treat and Admit (Inpatient Admissions): An ED patient that later become and inpatient. An inpatient stay involves and overnight stay and admission to another department of the hospital, such as the ICU.
All ED Encounters: All ED encounters includes all treat and release patients and all inpatient admissions through the ED.- Crude Rates - ED Injury Encounters
- Age-adjusted Rates - ED Injury Encounters