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  • Hospital discharges, cerebrovascular diseases, per 100 000 Hospital discharges, cerebrovascular diseases, per 100 000 (Line chart)
  • Hospital discharges, cerebrovascular diseases, per 100 000 Hospital discharges, cerebrovascular diseases, per 100 000 (Bar chart)
  • Hospital discharges, cerebrovascular diseases, per 100 000 Hospital discharges, cerebrovascular diseases, 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
Hospital discharges, cerebrovascular diseases, per 100 000
Indicator code: E990902.T This indicator shares the definition with the parent indicator \"Hospital discharges, cerebrovascular diseases\".

See 992971 above. ICD-9: 430-438 or ICD-10: I60-I69._
Country/Area notes
Albania
Ministry of Health.
Armenia
Source of data: National Health Information Analytic Center, Ministry of Health of the Republic of
Armenia http://moh.am/?section=static_pages/index&id=625&subID=824,29.
Data collected annually, reference period: 31 December.
Belgium
Source: Federal Public Service of Public Health. Food Chain Safety and Environment. Health Care
Facilities Organisation (DGI). 2007: provisional data.
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Public Health Institute - Annual hospital report. Public Health Institute of Federation of B&H;
Public Health Institute of Republic of Srpska. Annual report of hospitals.
Department for Health of Brcko District
Cyprus
General and rural hospitals, public sector only.
Czechia
Source: Institute of Health Information and Statistics of CR (IHIS CR), National Registry of
Hospitalized Patients. Deviation from the definition: Transfers of patients between departments
within a hospital are considered as a discharge.
Denmark
From 1994 data excludes transfers to other departments of the same hospital, which was included in
earlier data.
Only patients discharged from public hospitals are included.
Source: National Patient Registry, National Board of Health.
From 1994 Denmark started using ICD-10.
Estonia
Source: Annual reporting, National Institute for Health Development.
Finland
Source: From 2005 the hospital discharge data is taken from the detailed hospital discharge data
reported separately to WHO. Due to the different coverage, data may not be completely comparable
with previous years.
France
Includes data for French overseas territories. Includes also military hospitals since 2009.
Georgia
Source: National Centre for Disease Control and Public Health of Georgia (NCDC) (http://www.ncdc.ge)
Germany
The number of discharges includes deaths in hospitals, but excludes same-day separations and
transfers to other care units within the same institutions. Up to and including the reporting year
2002, data only include discharges in general hospitals and mental health hospitals. From reporting
year 2003, data include additionally discharges in preventive and rehabilitative hospitals, however
discharges of these institutions with less than 100 beds are not included. The years before 2003 are
therefore not comparable with the years following years. From the reporting year 2000, for the first
time, data have been collected according to ICD-10.
Source: Federal Statistical Office, Hospital statistics - diagnostic data of the hospital patients.
Hungary
Source until 2003: Center for Health Care Information (GYOGYINFOK). The data is the case number of
department discharges.
Source from 2004: National Institute for Strategic Health Research (ESKI) and the data is the case
number for hospital discharge, rather than case number for department discharge.
Iceland
Source until 1998: The Ministry of Health. Source from 1999: The Directorate of health. Based on
discharge data from all hospitals. Includes all discharges with a LOS of <90 days. Based on
main/principal diagnosis. When day of discharge is the same as day of admission the length of stay
is 1 day.
Break in series in 2008 due to the fact that data in the National Patient Discharge Register has
been updated /corrected.
Ireland
Source: The data presented are derived from the HIPE (Hospital In-Patient Enquiry) data set, which
records data on discharges from all publicly funded acute hospitals. The Economic and Social
Research Institute (ESRI) is contracted by the Health Service Executive (HSE) to manage the HIPE
system. See http://www.esri.ie/health_information/hipe/.

Coverage:
HIPE data covers all in-patients and day cases receiving curative and rehabilitative care in
publicly funded acute hospitals in the State. HIPE data do not include private hospitals. It is
estimated that in excess of 10% of all hospital activity in Ireland is undertaken in private
hospitals.
The data coverage in HIPE exceeds 96%, i.e. overall approximately 4% of activity in publicly funded
acute general hospitals is missing from HIPE.

The definition of day case is a patient who is formally admitted with the intention of discharging
the patient on the same day, and where the patient is in fact discharged as scheduled (i.e.
excluding deaths and emergency transfers) on the same day. All other patients, including those who
are admitted or discharged as emergencies on the same day, are considered in-patients. In accordance
with WHO guidelines, day cases have been excluded from the data presented for discharges. This
definition is the same as that used in submission of data to the OECD and Eurostat. This ensures
consistency in HIPE data reported by international organisations.

Deviation from the definition: None

Break in time series:
Data for 1994-2004 were classified using ICD-9-CM. All HIPE discharges from 2005 are now coded
using ICD-10-AM (the Australian Modification of ICD-10 incorporating the Australian Classification
of Health Interventions). The change from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-AM has resulted in some minor changes
in the classification of diagnoses and procedures. This means for certain categories comparisons of
data between years can be difficult. For more information on the introduction of ICD-10-AM in
Ireland see http://www.esri.ie/health_information/hipe/clinical_coding/classifications/.
Israel
Discharges from acute care hospitals. Source until 1993: based on Diagnostic Statistics of
Hospitalizations, Central Bureau of Statistics and Ministry of Health. Source since 1994: based on
the National Hospital Discharges Database, Department of Health Information, Ministry of Health. Day
treatment cases are not included since 1994.
Italy
See 992973. Source until 1996: ISTAT.
Source from 1997: Ministry of Health, National Database Hospital Discharges. Data refer to all
public and private hospitals. Clinical data gathered in the hospital discharges database are coded
with the following versions: until 2005 with ICD9-CM version 1997, from 2006 to 2008 with ICD9-CM
version 2002, since 2009 with the ICD9-CM version 2007.
Latvia
Statistical data cover patients who either returned home or died, excluding those who were
transferred to another inpatient facility.
Lithuania
Source: Up to 2000:LHIC, annual report data. From 2001: HI HIC data from Compulsory Health Insurance
Database (coverage 98% of all discharges). Coverage: Data excludes: nursing patients, day cases.
Luxembourg
Source: Rapport general de l'IGSS. Annual report of the General Inspection of Social Security.
Malta
Figures quoted since 2000 include discharges from the main public acute hospitals (SLH). Source:
Hospital Activity Analysis (HAA) which has a 75-80% response rate.
NB: Measures to improve response rate have been implemented successfully in 2003, therefore higher
figures. Hospital activity figures for 2006 are extracted from the combined HAA figures from the 2
main state hospitals: St. Luke's Hospital and Gozo General Hospital.
Montenegro
Source: Institute of Public Health.
Netherlands
Source: Hospital Discharge Register (HDR) of Dutch Hospital Data. The HDR covers only short-stay
hospitals. The hospitals included are all general and university hospitals and specialty hospitals
with the exception of epilepsy clinics and long-stay centres for rehabilitation and asthma
treatment. Discharges in Dutch hospitals of non-residents of the Netherlands are excluded. From 2005
onwards the HDR in the Netherlands suffers from a substantial degree of non-response. The
non-response (as a percentage of all discharges) increased from 1% in 2004 to 3% in 2007. Therefore
the figures were raised by imputation of data for the non-responding hospitals. This results in less
accuracy of the figures from 2005 onwards.
Poland
For 1980-1996 data estimated from 10% random sample. Since 2003 all discharges have been recorded.
In 2003-2004 total number of patients was estimated to adjust for missing data. Since 2005 data have
been reported as they are (data from ca. 90% of the general hospitals are available). Source:
National Institute of Public Health - National Institute of Hygiene.
Portugal
Source of data: Ministry of Health ? Central Administration of Health System (ACSS). Coverage: Only
the acute hospitals that belong to the National Health Service (NHS) on the mainland are included.
The data from the hospitals located in the autonomous regions of Azores and Madeira, and the private
hospitals are not included.
Romania
The data refer also to the discharged patients.
Serbia
Source: Institute of Public Health of Serbia, Hospital discharge reports.
Slovakia
Until 1998 hospitals provided data on hospital discharges also for those cases where a patient
changed departments within the hospital. Since 1999, hospitals provide data only when patient is
discharged from the hospital and not when patient changes departments within the hospital.
Slovenia
Institute of Public Health of the Republic of Slovenia, Ljubljana 1996.
Spain
Source: National Statistics Institute. Hospital Morbidity Survey. Data collected from all hospitals
(public, private, army). Currently the sample covers 85% of all hospitals and 91% of hospital
discharges. A hospital discharge includes one night stay or more in a hospital. The length of stay=0
is not included. For period 1980-2000 ICD-9 coding used. From 2001 the ICD-9 Revision CM is
applied.(www.ine.es/)
Sweden
ICD-10: I60-I69. Source: National Patient Register, NBHW.
Switzerland
The series have been corrected to restrict the figures to inpatient cases (exclusion of day cases).
Source of data: FSO Federal Statistical Office, Neuchatel; Medical Statistics of Hospitals; yearly
census.
Coverage: Full coverage of hospitals; sufficient (nearly full) coverage of inpatient and day cases
since 2002. Due to a modification of the legislation, day cases are not collected in 2009 anymore.
Deviation from the definition:
Estimation method: Discharges without a valid ICD-code are not accounted for (negligible).
Break in time series: The gradual change of diagnosis classification since 2008 from ICD-10 WHO to
ICD-10 GM (German Modification) may lead to breaks for some categories.
Türkiye
Calculated according to ICD-10 codes (Information Technologies Coordination Unit).
Turkmenistan
Source of data: Administrative medical statistics, forms: 14 ?Report on hospital activity? and 066/y
?Hospital discharge record?.
Ukraine
Included only data from public hospitals under Ministry of Health.
Source: Centre of Health Statistics, Ministry of Health.
United Kingdom
Source of Data: England - NHS Information Centre.
Scotland - NHS National Services Scotland, Information Services Division (ISD).
Wales - NHS Wales Informatics Service(NWIS), Patient Episode Database.
N. Ireland - Department for Health, Social Services and Public Safety, HIS.

Coverage: Includes UK NHS hospitals or NHS commissioned activity in the independent sector. Based
on diagnosis recorded at discharge.
Scotland have revised their timeseries data due to improvements in data quality.

Break in Time Series: Data from 2000 onwards is not comparable with data from prior to this. This
is due to work conducted to improve compliance with definitions and consistency of methodologies
across the four parts of the UK.
2010 - All data is financial year data with the exception of Scotland whose data is calendar year.


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