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Key Health Data for the West Midlands 2005

CONTENTS


Chapter

Title

1 Health Geography
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Reorganisation of Health Services
1.3 Access to Ordnance Survey map data by NHS organisations
1.4 2004 Electoral Ward Boundary Changes
   
2 Quality of Primary care and health inequalities
2.1 Introduction
2.2 QOF across the West Midlands
2.3 Clinical domain performance
2.4 Indicator level analysis
2.5 Prevalence
2.6 Using QOF to improve services
   
3 Chemical Incidents in the West Midlands in 2005
3.1 Introduction
   
4 Ethnicity and Infectious Disease (tuberculosis, HIV and meningococcal disease)
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Tuberculosis in the West Midlands
4.3 HIV in the West Midlands
4.4 Meningococcal Disease
   
5 Trends in Emergency Admissions in the West Midlands Region 2000 - 2001 to 2004 - 2005
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Results
5.3 Discussion
   
6 The Possible Effect of Demographic Projections on West Midlands Casemix
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Background
6.2.1 Payment by Results
6.2.2 Demographic Projections
6.3 Methods
6.4 Results
6.4.1 Population Projections
6.4.2 Strategic Health Authority Population Projections
6.4.3 SHA Projections of PbR Costs
6.5 Discussion
   
7 Trend Data for Selected Local Authority Profile Indicators
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Mortality from All Causes Aged under 75
7.3 Mortality from All Causes Aged 75 and over
7.4 Mortality from Coronary Heart Disease Aged under 75
7.5 Mortality from Coronary Heart Disease Aged 75 and over
7.6 Mortality from Stroke Aged Under 75
7.7 Mortality from Stroke Aged 75 and over
7.8 Mortality from All Circulatory Disease Aged Under 75
7.9 Mortality from All Circulatory Disease Aged 75 and over
7.10 Mortality from All Cancers Aged Under 75
7.11 Mortality from All Cancers Aged 75 and over
7.12 Mortality from Accidents Aged Under 15
7.13 Mortality from Accidental Falls Aged 75 and over
7.14 Infant Mortality
7.15 Live birth rates
   
8 A comparison of Deprivation Indices: Townsend 4 and 2004 Index of Multiple Deprivation
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Background
8.3 Domains used in calculation of IMD 2004
8.3.1 Income Deprivation Domain
8.3.2 Employment Deprivation Domain
8.3.3 Health Deprivation and Disability Domain
8.3.4 Education, Skills and Training Deprivation Domain
8.3.5 Barriers to Housing and Services Domain
8.3.6 The Living Environment Deprivation Domain
8.3.7 Crime Domain
8.4 Aims of this chapter
8.5 Methodology
8.6 Results
8.7 Discussion
   
9 Place of Death in the West Midlands
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Background
9.2.1 ONS Death Certificate Codes
9.3 Methods
9.4 Results
9.4.1 All Deaths
9.4.2 Cancer Deaths
9.4.3 Pulmonary Deaths
9.4.4 Heart Failure Deaths
9.4.5 Renal Deaths
9.4.6 Dementia Deaths
9.5 Discussion
   
10 Childhood Obesity
10.1 Introduction to Obesity
10.2 Causes of Obesity
10.3 Measurement of Obesity
10.4 Childhood Obesity Data
   
11 Synthetic Estimates of Psychiatric Morbidity in Adults living in private households
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Neurotic Symptoms
11.3 Neurotic Disorders
11.4 Personality Disorders
11.5 Synthetic Estimates
11.6 Tables included in this publication and on the accompanying CD
   
12 Trend data for alcohol-related harm in the West Midlands
12.1 Introduction
12.2 Alcohol-related mortality
12.3 Alcohol-related accident hospital admissions
12.4 Hospital admissions due to alcoholic liver disease, chronic hepatitis not elsewhere mentioned and fibrosis and cirrhosis of the liver
12.5 Hospital admissions due to mental and behavioural disorders related to alcohol use
   
13 Treatment for Drug Misuse
13.1 Introduction
13.1.2 Recent trends in data collection
13.1.3 The structure of data collected
13.1.4 Prevalence and treatment in the English regions
13.2 The Scale and Distribution of Treatment in the West Midlands
13.2.1 Agencies providing treatment
13.2.2 Drug & Alcohol Action Team areas
13.2.3 Clients who were "new presentations"
13.2.4 The locations of treatment and residence
13.3 A Profile of Clients in Treatment
13.3.1 Gender and age
13.3.2 Ethnicity and treatment for drug misuse
13.4 The Character of Drug Misuse and Treatment
13.4.1 Substances and routes of administration
13.4.2 Types of treatment provided
13.4.3 Referral sources and treatment outcomes

For more information please contact Sarafina Cotterill  
© Department of Public Health and Epidemiology, University of Birmingham