Acute Care Beds 
Acute care is treatment for a short period of time for a brief but severe episode of illness. The term is generally associated with care rendered in an emergency department, ambulatory care clinic, or other short-term stay facility. The number of beds indicates the number of people who could concurrently receive these services. An important aspect of the current health care crisis in the US is the result of the growing need for acute care despite a decrease in the number of facilities which provide that care. This mismatch has resulted from the dramatic increase in the number of patients who are uninsured or underinsured, and therefore unable to pay for services rendered. Those patients often turn to emergency departments for their acute care needs. That has resulted in overcrowding and made it increasingly difficult to focus adequate resources on those patients who present with true emergencies.

Looking at numbers of professionals or facilities within a geographic area helps to focus on the availability of health care and its quality.

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Rate Type
 
Measure Type 
10 Year Report
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Alachua County
Florida
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At least 51 counties must have rates greater than zero for a quartile map to be displayed.

Age-adjusted Acute Care Beds, Rate Per 100,000 Population, Single Year
AlachuaFlorida
Data YearCountRateCountRate
20231,44755,617
20221,44755,028
20211,42354,365
20201,39753,868
20191,37953,552
20181,31952,174
20171,41652,102
20161,20051,476
20151,21350,894
20141,21350,887
20131,21350,934
20121,22350,373
20111,13949,777
20101,11549,875
20091,11549,765
20081,28149,530
20071,25149,200
20061,20448,578
20051,16248,021
20041,13847,376
FLHealthCharts.gov is provided by the Florida Department of Health, Division of Public Health Statistics and Performance Management.
Data Source: Florida Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA)
3/28/2024 4:12:22 PM
Data Note(s)
  • Data as of December of the specified year
  • This is secondary, quantitative data.
  • All population-based rates are calculated using July 1 Florida population estimates from the Florida Legislature, Office of Economic and Demographic Research.
  • 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 are 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.