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Excess under 75 mortality rates in adults with serious mental illness indicator is a measure of the extent to which adults with a serious mental illness (SMI) die younger than adults without a serious mental illness (nSMI).
The Adult Social Care Outcomes Framework (ASCOF) measures how well care and support services achieve the outcomes that matter most to people. The ASCOF is used both locally and nationally to set priorities for care and support, measure progress and strengthen transparency and accountability.
The Compendium hospital care set covers the following publications:
This collection of indicators helps organisations measure health and the diverse range of factors which influence health inequalities in their local population, such as unemployment, poverty, crime and education. The indicators were originally created to help Primary Care Trusts and Local Authorities...
The Compendium set of Public health indicators covers the following publications: Abortions, Alcohol consumption, Births, Chromosomal abnormalities/congenital malformations, Circulatory diseases, Conceptions, Dental Health, Diabetes, Epilepsy, Fertility, General health, Immunisations and infectious diseases, Kidney/renal...
A measure of the extent to which adults with a serious mental illness (SMI) die younger than adults without a serious mental illness (nSMI).
A measure of the extent to which adults with a serious mental illness (SMI) die younger than adults without a serious mental illness (nSMI).
A measure of the extent to which adults with a serious mental illness (SMI) die younger than adults without a serious mental illness (nSMI).
This indicator was put on hold in November 2016 until the introduction of the new mental health services data set (MHSDS) meant that a new indicator methodology could be developed. The indicator was republished with a new methodology in December 2020 and consequently comparisons should not be made to...
UPDATE February 2021: Two issues affecting the contextual information for indicator 1.5.i have been identified. Neither of these issues affected the indicator values and both have been corrected in the excel and CSV files for this indicator: