Statistics about Neurosis
Society statistics for Neurosis
Hospitalization statistics for Neurosis:
The following are statistics from various sources
about hospitalizations and Neurosis:
- 0.24% (30,016) of hospital episodes were for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 92% of hospital consultations for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders required hospital admission in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 39% of hospital episodes for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders were for men in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 59% of hospital episodes for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders were for women in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 69% of hospital admissions for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders required emergency hospital admission in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 28.3 days was the mean length of stay in hospitals for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 9 days was the median length of stay in hospitals for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 41 was the mean age of patients hospitalised for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 80% of hospitalisations for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders occurred in 15-59 year olds in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 7% of hospitalisations for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders occurred in people over 75 in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 5% of hospitalisations for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders were single day episodes in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 1.12% (585,293) of hospital bed days were for neurotic, behavioural and personality disorders in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- Neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders resulted in 49,415 hospitalisations in Australia 2001-02 (AIHW Hospital Morbidity Database 2001-02, Australia’s Health 2004, AIHW)
- Neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders accounted for 210,115 patient days inhospitals in Australia 2001-02 (AIHW Hospital Morbidity Database 2001-02, Australia’s Health 2004, AIHW)
- Hospitalization statistics in Australia in psychiatric hospitals:
- 2,169 hospital episodes in public psychiatric hospitals were for neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders in Australia 2001-02 (Australian Hospital Data, AIHW, Australia, 2001-02)
- 19.6% of hospitalisations in public psychiatric hospitals for neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders were single day episodes in Australia 2001-02 (Australian Hospital Data, AIHW, Australia, 2001-02)
- 99% of hospitalisations in public psychiatric hospitals for neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders were by public patients in Australia 2001-02 (Australian Hospital Data, AIHW, Australia, 2001-02)
- Hospitalisations for neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders at public psychiatric hospitals occurred in 1.1 people per 10,000 population in Australia 2001-02 (Australian Hospital Data, AIHW, Australia, 2001-02)
- 6.3 days was the mean length of stay for neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders in public psychiatric hospitals in Australia 2001-02 (Australian Hospital Data, AIHW, Australia, 2001-02)
- Excluding same day episodes, 7.6 days was the mean length of stay in public psychiatric hospitals for neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders in Australia 2001-02 (Australian Hospital Data, AIHW, Australia, 2001-02)
About statistics:
This page presents a variety of statistics about Neurosis.
The term 'prevalence' of Neurosis usually refers to the estimated population
of people who are managing Neurosis at any given time.
The term 'incidence' of Neurosis refers to the annual diagnosis rate,
or the number of new cases of Neurosis diagnosed each year.
Hence, these two statistics types can differ:
a short-lived disease like flu can have high annual incidence but low prevalence,
but a life-long disease like diabetes has a low annual incidence but high prevalence.
For more information see about prevalence and incidence statistics.