• Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Performance Framework
    • Australian Mesothelioma Registry
    • GEN Aged Care Data
    • Housing data
    • Indigenous Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Clearinghouse
    • Metadata Online Registry (METEOR)
    • Regional Insights for Indigenous Communities
  • Contact us
  • Help & tools
  • Login
  • Increase text size
  • Decrease text size
Home - Australian Government - Australian Institute of Health and Welfare - logo AIHW - logo
  • Home
  • COVID-19
    COVID-19
  • Reports & data Use down arrow to expand
    Reports & data

    Find reports & data by topic

    • Health & welfare overview
    • Health & welfare services
    • Population groups
    • Health conditions, disability & deaths
    • Behaviours & risk factors
    • Corporate publications
    Suicide & self-harm monitoring Data and information on suicide and self-harm in Australia Hospitals Australia’s national hospital reporting platform Australia's health performance The latest on Australia’s health and health system performance
    • A-Z topics
    • Latest releases
    • Educational resources

    Featured

    • Australia's health 2022 The AIHW’s 18th biennial report on the health of Australians.
    • Australia's welfare 2021 The AIHW's 15th biennial report on the welfare of Australians.
  • Our services Use down arrow to expand
    Our services
    • Data linkage
    • Metadata support
    • Validata
    • Secure Remote Access Environment (SRAE)
    • Ethical (HREC) review
  • About our data Use down arrow to expand
    About our data
    • Our data collections
    • AIHW data by geography
    • AIHW data by indicators
    • Accessing data through the AIHW
    • Data governance
    • Other government data
  • News & media Use down arrow to expand
    News & media
    • Podcasts
    • Latest news & events
    • Media releases
    • For the media
    • Subscribe to release notices
    • Forthcoming releases
  • About us Use down arrow to expand
    About us
    • Our role & strategic goals
    • Our people & structure
    • Our governance
    • Our committees
    • Our impact
    • Privacy
    • Our international role
    • Submissions to inquiries
    • Freedom of information
    • Public interest disclosure
    • Gifts & benefits register
    • Tenders
    • Careers
    • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Performance Framework
    • Australian Mesothelioma Registry
    • GEN Aged Care Data
    • Housing data
    • Indigenous Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Clearinghouse
    • Metadata Online Registry (METEOR)
    • Regional Insights for Indigenous Communities
  • Contact us
  • Help & tools
  • Login
  • Increase text size
  • Decrease text size
You are here: Home Reports & data Injury Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2006-07
Go to Injury

Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2006-07

Publication
Release Date: 14 Sep 2012
Topic: Injury

Citation

AIHW

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2012) Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2006-07, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 07 July 2022.

APA

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2012). Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2006-07. Canberra: AIHW.

MLA

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2006-07. AIHW, 2012.

Vancouver

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2006-07. Canberra: AIHW; 2012.

Harvard

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2012, Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2006-07, AIHW, Canberra.

Get citations as an Endnote file: Endnote

PDF | 2.7Mb

Other formats

Download publication Order hardcopy
 
Newer release available
View report
Download PDF

This report is the fifth in a series on hospitalisations due to injury and poisoning in Australia, and covers the financial year 2006-07. A total of 386,208 injury cases required hospitalisation in the 12 months (225,297 males and 160,905 females). Overall rates of injury were higher among people aged 65 and over, and lower in children aged 0-14. The leading causes of hospitalised injury were unintentional falls (36% of cases), followed by transport accidents (14%).

  • ISSN: 1444-3791
  • ISBN: 978-1-74249-339-8
  • Cat. no: INJCAT 139
  • Pages: 148
Show navigation
Back to topic
  • Contents
    • Table of contents
    • Summary
  • Report editions
  • Formats
  • Related material

Related material

Resources

Latest related reports

  • Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2009-10

    Publication | 30 Nov 2012

  • Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2007-08

    Publication | 14 Sep 2012

  • Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2008-09

    Publication | 14 Sep 2012

Last updated 15/02/2018 v4.0

AIHW

  • About us
  • Our committees
  • Our governance
  • Our reports
  • Our data
  • News & media

Using AIHW

  • Accessibility
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer
  • Indexed list of files
  • Privacy
  • Site map

Quick links

  • Home
  • Careers
  • AIHW Ethics Committee
  • Our data collections
  • Data on request
  • Data linkage
  • Login

Connect with us

Follow AIHW on Twitter Visit AIHW on YouTube Connect with AIHW on LinkedIn

© Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2022

Creative Commons
Close

Feedback

We'd love to know any feedback that you have about the AIHW website, its contents or reports.

Required fields

The browser you are using to browse this website is outdated and some features may not display properly or be accessible to you. Please use a more recent browser for the best user experience.