Identifying and definitional attributes | |
Metadata item type: | Data Quality Statement |
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METEOR identifier: | 640407 |
Registration status: | AIHW Data Quality Statements, Superseded 06/10/2017 |
Data quality | |
Data quality statement summary: | Summary of key issues
Description The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) annually compiles its health expenditure database, which comprises a wide range of information about health expenditure in Australia. Data from this database are reported 15 months after the end of the financial year. Each release provides a 10-year time series from the reference year. In this release, data are provided for 2014–15 and back to 2004–05. Health expenditure is defined as expenditure on health goods and services and health-related investment. The definition closely follows the definitions and concepts that the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) System of Health Accounts (OECD, Eurostat & WHO 2011) framework provides. It excludes:
Recurrent expenditure and capital expenditure are included. These data are provided to the OECD annually to enable the monitoring of the impact of changes in the way health care is delivered and financed, as well as to enable international comparisons. |
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Institutional environment: | The AIHW is a major national agency set up by the Australian Government under the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Act 1987 to provide reliable, regular and relevant information and statistics on Australia’s health and welfare. It is an independent corporate Commonwealth entity established in 1987, governed by a management board, and accountable to the Australian Parliament through the Australian Government Health portfolio. The AIHW aims to improve the health and wellbeing of Australians through better health and welfare information and statistics. It collects and reports information on a wide variety of topics and issues—from health and welfare expenditure, hospitals, disease and injury, and mental health, to ageing, homelessness, disability and child protection. The Institute also plays a role in developing and maintaining national metadata standards. This work contributes to improving the quality and consistency of national health and welfare statistics. The Institute works closely with governments and non-government organisations to achieve greater adherence to these standards in administrative data collections to promote national consistency and comparability of data and reporting. One of the main functions of the AIHW is to work with the states and territories to improve the quality of administrative data and, where possible, to compile national data sets based on data from each jurisdiction, to analyse these data sets, and to disseminate information and statistics. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Act 1987, in conjunction with compliance to the Privacy Act 1988, (Cth) ensures that the data collections managed by the AIHW are kept securely and under the strictest conditions with respect to privacy and confidentiality. For further information see http://www.aihw.gov.au. The AIHW’s expenditure reporting forms Australia’s National Health Accounts, which are distinct from but related to the National Accounts produced by the ABS. The AIHW compiles its health expenditure database from a wide variety of government and non-government sources. Since 2008–09, the main source of state and territory government expenditure data has been the Government Health Expenditure National Minimum Data Set (GHE NMDS), which is data provided by the states and territories to the AIHW. Information about Australian Government expenditure is sourced from the Australian Government Department of Health and Treasury. |
Timeliness: | This release includes data for the 2014–15 financial year, as well as data back to 2004–05. The AIHW health expenditure database cannot be compiled for a given year until all providers have supplied data for that year. Timely reporting depends on whether all providers meet the deadline for data supply. Any delay to data supply past the deadline has an impact on the release date. The data are generally released 15 months after the end of the reference year, as part of the Health expenditure Australia series of publications. There have been some revisions to previously published estimates of health expenditure, due to receipt of extra or revised data or changes in method. As a result, comparisons over time should be based on the estimates provided in the most recent publication, or from the online data cubes, rather than by reference to earlier editions. |
Accessibility: | Reports are published and are available on the AIHW website where they can be downloaded without charge, see http://www.aihw.gov.au/expenditure-publications. Data are also available through data cubes, see http://www.aihw.gov.au/expenditure-data. General enquiries about AIHW publications can be made to the Digital and Media Communications Unit on (02) 6244 1026 or via email to [email protected]. Specific enquiries about health expenditure data can be made to the Expenditure and Workforce Unit. |
Interpretability: | See Appendix C of the Health expenditure Australia 2014–15 report for detailed descriptions of concepts, data sources and estimation methods, and the Glossary for the terms used. Further information on the GHE NMDS can also be found on the AIHW’s METeOR system /content/index.phtml/itemId/540601. |
Relevance: | Scope and coverage The AIHW health expenditure database is highly relevant for monitoring trends in health expenditure, including international comparisons. Policy-makers, researchers, government and non-government organisations, and the public use these data for many purposes. Comparisons with GDP enable consideration of the role of the health sector relative to the broader economy, and per person expenditure provides an indication of changes in expenditure in relation to the population. The relative contribution of the Australian Government and state and territory governments is relevant to health policy and administration. Similarly, non-government sector expenditure, including the out-of-pocket expenses of individuals, is also relevant to various health policy issues such as those related to access and provision of services. The estimates enable state and territory governments to monitor the impact of their policy initiatives on overall expenditures on health goods and services provided within its borders. Reference period The most recent reference period of these data in the database is the 2014−15 financial year. Geographic detail Data are presented at the national and state and territory levels. Statistical standards The data are collated in terms of the AIHW’s classification of area of expenditure and source of funds as well as the OECD’s System of Health Accounts. |
Accuracy: | Potential sources of error Total health expenditure reported for Australia (both domestically and internationally) is slightly underestimated—it excludes some types of health-related expenditure, including health-related Australian Defence Force expenditure and some local government expenditure. Some of the expenditure by non-government health organisations—such as the National Heart Foundation and Diabetes Australia—is also not included. In particular, most of the non-research expenditure funded by donations to these organisations is not included, as data are not available. The estimates do not include indirect expenditure such as the cost of lost wages for people accessing health services. In some cases public hospitals receive fees from medical practitioners in return for the right to practice privately within the hospital. The medical practitioner may then receive payment from the Medicare Benefits Schedule, individuals and/or private health insurance funds for these services. The expenditure from these sources is captured in the expenditure data, but the fees received by the hospital are not always captured as revenue in the hospitals data. This can effectively lead to a double counting of expenditure on the same service. That is, it appears as though the hospital paid for a portion of the service as well as the Medicare Benefits Schedule, for example. The AIHW does not separately collect health expenditure information from local government authorities. If local government authorities received funding for health care from the Australian Government or state and territory government, it appears as expenditure by that respective body. The data, to the greatest extent possible, are produced on an accrual basis; that is, expenditures and funding reported for each area relate to expenses and revenues incurred in the year in which they are reported. This is not always achievable. For example, the data from private health insurance funds are sometimes provided on the basis of the date when the claims for benefit are processed, which is not necessarily the same as the date when the services were provided. Data validation Data provided by state and territory health agencies are validated by the agency to ensure they have been collected accurately. State and territory health agencies are also provided with an opportunity to review the final data for their jurisdiction before publication. Agency participation The AIHW’s Health Expenditure Advisory Committee provides advice on the health expenditure collection and reporting. The committee meets twice a year and consists of representatives from the Australian Government Department of Health, Treasury, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Department of Veterans' Affairs, Commonwealth Grants Commission, Australian Government Department of Human Services, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, and each state and territory health department. |
Coherence: | Due to differing estimation methods and data sources, state and territory estimates published in the Health expenditure Australia 2014–15 report may differ from the data published by individual jurisdictions and in other reports, including AIHW reports such as the Australian Hospital Statistics series and publications by the Independent Hospital Pricing Authority, the National Health Funding Body and the Productivity Commission. Since 2008–09, data presented in the Health expenditure Australia series of publications have been collected through the GHE NMDS. The data collection process requires state and territory data providers to allocate expenditure against a different range of categories from those used for previous collections. These data have been mapped back to the expenditure categories from previous Health expenditure Australia reports to ensure consistency and comparability in these statistics over time. |
Source and reference attributes | |
Reference documents: | ABS 2016. Australian national accounts: national income, expenditure and product, March 2016. Cat. no. 5206.0. Canberra: ABS. AIHW 2016. Health expenditure Australia 2014–15. Health and welfare expenditure series no. 57. Cat. no. HWE 67. Canberra: AIHW. OECD, Eurostat & WHO 2011. A system of health accounts 2011 edition. Paris: OECD. |
Relational attributes | |
Related metadata references: | Supersedes Health expenditure database 2013–14 AIHW Data Quality Statements, Superseded 06/10/2016 Has been superseded by Health expenditure database 2015–16; Quality Statement AIHW Data Quality Statements, Superseded 28/09/2018 |