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  • Incidence of viral hepatitis A per 100 000 Incidence of viral hepatitis A per 100 000 (Line chart)
  • Incidence of viral hepatitis A per 100 000 Incidence of viral hepatitis A per 100 000 (Bar chart)
  • Incidence of viral hepatitis A per 100 000 Incidence of viral hepatitis A per 100 000 (Boxplot chart)
Data set notes
European Health for All database

Indicators: 618
Updated: 24 January 2024

The following abbreviations are used in the indicator titles:
•    SDR: age-standardized death rates (see HFA-DB user manual/Technical notes, page 13, for details)
•    FTE: full-time equivalent
•    PP: physical persons
•    PPP$: purchasing power parities expressed in US $, an internationally comparable scale reflecting the relative domestic purchasing powers of currencies.

Indicator notes
Incidence of viral hepatitis A per 100 000
Indicator code: E040311.T This indicator shares the definition with the parent indicator \"Number of new hepatitis A cases\".

See 045310 above. ICD-9: 070.0, 070.1; ICD-10: B15._
Country/Area notes
Belgium
Data sources: Sanitary Inspection of the Ministry of the Flemish Community Government; Sanitary
Inspection of the Ministry of the French Community Government.
Remarks: These data only refer to cases that occurred in the Flemish and Walloon Region. Data of the
Brussels Capital Region are not available. (The Brussels Capital Region has approximately 950 000
inhabitants, which is about 10% of the Belgian population). Because of a serious underreporting,
this number is an underestimation.
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Public Health Institute BIH - Department of Epidemiology.
Denmark
January 2000
Number of individually reported hepatitis A cases, diagnosed during the given calendar year.
Source State Serum Institute.
Estonia
Some Facts about Health Care of Estonia 1990-1995. Estonian Medical Statistical Bureau.
Finland
Source: National Public Health Institute.
Germany
Source: German Health Monitoring System
Iceland
Source: Directorate of Health, Section for Infectious Disease Control.
Ireland
Source: Central Statistics Office for 1982-1984. Department of Health for subsequent years.
Israel
Department of Epidemiology, Ministry of Health.
Italy
January 2000:
Source: Ministry of Health
Lithuania
National Public Health Centre.
Netherlands
Chief Medical Officer of Public Health.
Slovenia
Institute of Public Health of the Republic of Slovenia, Ljubljana 1996 (Epidemiologic monitoring of
communicable diseases in Slovenia).
Sweden
Swedish Institutes for Infectious Disease Control.