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MyHospitals provides performance information for public and private hospitals in Australia. You can also compare the performance of these hospitals and find information about hospitals near you.
The annual average number of beds available to be used by an admitted patient was grouped into the following categories: fewer than 50, 50-100, 100-200, 200-500 and more than 500. These data are as reported by states and territories to the NPHED, and are referred to in statistical publications (including Australian hospital statistics) as 'average available beds'. The average number of available beds presented may differ from counts published elsewhere. For example, counts based on bed numbers at a specified date such as 30 June may differ from the average available beds over the reporting period. Comparability of bed numbers can be affected by the range and types of patients treated by a hospital. For example, hospitals may have different proportions of beds available for general versus special purposes (such as beds or cots used exclusively for intensive care). Bed counts also include chairs for same-day admissions.
Data is current as of December 2015. Data sourced from: http://www.myhospitals.gov.au/about-the-data/download-data
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The Victorian Emergency Minimum Dataset (VEMD) contains information detailing presentations at Victorian public hospitals with designated Emergency Departments. For the purposes of this report, patients presenting for family violence reasons are identified by the ‘human intent’ data item. \r \r At the Emergency Department, the clinician assesses the most likely human intent. Patients presenting for family violence reasons are those that presented with a human intent injury of 'Maltreatment, assault by domestic partner' or 'Child neglect/maltreatment by parent or guardian'. The VEMD information published under the Family Violence Database (FVDB) focuses on the demographic characteristics as well as the nature and cause of their injuries of the patients presenting for family violence reasons. The FVDB only reports on family violence (FV) related patients (as indicated by the human intent data item). Therefore, when there is a reference in the FVDB to 'patients', this only includes family violence related patients presenting to a public hospital in Victoria.\r \r The counting unit for the VEMD is the patient presenting at a Victorian public hospital. In the dataset there is one record per patient. However, persons can present multiple times at the emergency department and thus have multiple records in the VEMD.
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Names of hospitals in Australia, their geographic coordinates (Longitude and Latitude) and an assigned hospital identifier between 1 and 1,011 (Hospital_ID).
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This dataset contains a description and co-ordinates of places of interest within the City of Melbourne.
Themes include: Community Use, Education Centre, Health Services, Leisure/Recreation, Mixed Use, Office, Place Of Assembly, Place of Worship, Purpose Built, Retail, Transport, Vacant Land
Sub-themes include: Art Gallery/Museum, Church, Function/Conference/Exhibition Centre, Informal Outdoor Facility (Park/Garden/Reserve), Major Sports & Recreation Facility, Office, Public Buildings, Public Hospital, Railway Station, Retail/Office/Carpark, Tertiary (University), Theatre Live
Interviews on hospital arts, design, and architecture for the UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship 'Sensing Spaces of Healthcare: Rethinking the NHS Hospital' (MR/S033793/1) in 2022-23.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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A retrieval is a coordinated inter-hospital transfer of a patient, who has a critical care or time critical healthcare need, which is unable to be met at the original health service. Retrieval services are provided by specialised clinical crews with advanced training in transport, retrieval and critical care medicine, operating within a structured system which ensures governance & standards. Cases handled by Adult Retrieval Victoria include the provision of adult critical care and major trauma advice, coordination of critical care bed access and retrieval of critical care patients state-wide.
Clinical data on colorectal cancer patients
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
MyHospitals provides performance information for public and private hospitals in Australia. You can also compare the performance of these hospitals and find information about hospitals near you.
The annual average number of beds available to be used by an admitted patient was grouped into the following categories: fewer than 50, 50-100, 100-200, 200-500 and more than 500. These data are as reported by states and territories to the NPHED, and are referred to in statistical publications (including Australian hospital statistics) as 'average available beds'. The average number of available beds presented may differ from counts published elsewhere. For example, counts based on bed numbers at a specified date such as 30 June may differ from the average available beds over the reporting period. Comparability of bed numbers can be affected by the range and types of patients treated by a hospital. For example, hospitals may have different proportions of beds available for general versus special purposes (such as beds or cots used exclusively for intensive care). Bed counts also include chairs for same-day admissions.
Data is current as of December 2015. Data sourced from: http://www.myhospitals.gov.au/about-the-data/download-data