Mental Health and Addiction: Service use 2009/10

Mental Health and Addiction: Service use 2009/10 (…
13 Feb 2013
doc
Mental Health and Addiction: Service use 2009/10 (…
13 Feb 2013
pdf
Mental Health and Addiction: Service Use 2009/10 A…
13 Feb 2013
xls

This publication provides information on the care (service) provided between July 2009 and June 2010 (2009/10) by district health boards and non-government organisations to people with a mental illness or addiction.

Specifically the publication provides information on:

  • client demographics
  • mental health and addiction services provided to these clients
  • the outcomes of this service use

Key Results

Key facts

  • In 2009/10, 120,293 clients were seen by secondary mental health and addiction services. DHBs saw 116,645 of these clients and NGOs saw 12,256. The total number of clients seen increased by 8.1% from 2008/09. Just over half (54%) of all clients seen were male.
  • Clients aged 15–24 years (youth) were most likely to be seen by secondary mental health and addiction services (3987.7 per 100,000 youth population).
  • Clients identifying themselves as Māori made up 22.4% of all clients seen. For Pacific peoples, this figure was 5.5% and 3.2% identified themselves as Asian. The Māori age-standardised rate was higher than the rates of all other ethnic groups.
  • Clients living in the most deprived areas were 2.7 times more likely to be seen by mental health and addiction services than clients living in the least deprived areas.
  • Community teams saw more clients than any other team type.
Page last modified: 15 Mar 2018