Injury is defined as “physical harm or damage to someone’s body.” These data refer to all injuries, whether intentional or unintentional.
Monitoring injury data helps determine injury's impact on death and disability. Understanding injury mechanisms and intent helps identify priorities for reducing injuries and their consequences.
Data Source: Florida Agency for Health Care Administration
Data are for Florida residents based on county of residence.
Hospital and emergency department visit data do not include Veteran Affairs (VA) and other federal hospitals, rehabilitation centers, and psychiatric hospitals.
Data reflects hospitalizations or emergency department visits rather than the number of people.
Rates are per 100,000 population. Rates based on total counts less than 20 may be unstable; use with caution.
Effective October 1, 2015, the ICD 9th Revision Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) transitioned to ICD 10th Revision Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM). Data before October 2015 use ICD-9-CM; starting in October 2015,data use ICD-10-CM. Consequently, increases or decreases starting in 2015 may not be due to changes in disease trends but due to changes in coding.
Counts of 1-4 are suppressed.
Traumatic brain injury*: S02.0, S02.1, S02.8X, S02.80, S02.81, S02.82, S02.91, S04.02, S04.03, S04.04, S06, S07.1, T74.4. *7th character of A, B, or missing (reflects initial encounter, active treatment). Traumatic brain injury status is available for all injury hospitalizations, unintentional motor vehicle traffic-related, motor vehicle traffic-related injury to motorcyclist, motor vehicle traffic-related injury to occupant, motor vehicle traffic-related injury to pedalcyclist, motor vehicle traffic-related injury to pedestrian, unintentional-related injury, assault-related injury, violence-related injury, unintentional fall-related injury and all injury Emergency Department (ED) visits.
Data Source:
Chart will display if there are at least three years of data.
Multi-year counts are a sum of the selected years, not an average.
Quartiles are calculated when data is available for at least 51 counties.
MOV - Measure of Variability: Probable range of values resulting from random fluctuations in the number of events. Not calculated when numerator is below 5 or denominator is below 20, or count or rate is suppressed. The MOV is useful for comparing rates to a goal or standard. For example, if the absolute difference between the county rate and the statewide rate is less than the MOV, the county rate is not significantly different from the statewide rate (alpha level = 0.05). When the absolute difference between the county rate and the statewide rate is greater than the MOV, the county rate is significantly different from the statewide rate. MOV should not be used to determine if the rates of two different counties, or the county rates for two different years, are statistically significantly different.
Denom - abbreviated for Denominator.
Population estimates are not available for persons whose county of residence is unknown. Given this, the denominator and associated rate are not available.
* - Indicates the county rate is statistically significantly different from the statewide rate.