Max Rady College of Medicine

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81. Causes of Day Surgery
The most frequent reasons for day surgery, defined as surgical services received on an outpatient basis in acute care facilities. Each day surgery abstract has a ‘most responsible’ diagnosis – the diagnosis that describes the most significant condit...
82. Causes of Death
This indicator measures the distribution or frequency of cause of death based on five years of Vital Statistics mortality data. This indicator is grouped according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) chapters and reported by geogr...
83. Causes of Hospital Days Used
This indicator measures the distribution or frequency of reasons for hospital days used during inpatient hospitalizations and day surgeries in a fiscal year, based on most responsible diagnosis. This indicator is grouped according to International Classif...
84. Causes of Hospital Days Used for Acute Care
The most common reasons for hospital days coded only as acute care (i.e., no ALC days) during inpatient hospitalizations. Each hospital abstract has a ‘most responsible’ diagnosis – the diagnosis that describes the most significant condition of a p...
85. Causes of Hospitalization / Causes of Inpatient Hospitalization (Acute Care)
This indicator measures the distribution or frequency of "Most Responsible" diagnoses attributed during inpatient hospitalizations. The indicator is grouped according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) Chapters and reported by geographi...
86. Causes of Infant Mortality
Causes of death for infants under one year of age, categorized by the chapters of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes as reported on the Death Certificate (also known as the Medical Certificate of Death) from Vital Statistics.
87. Causes of Injury Hospitalization
See Injury Hospitalization Causes glossary term.
88. Causes of Premature Death
This indicator measures the distribution or frequency of cause of death for Manitobans aged 0 to 74 based on five years of Vital Statistics mortality data. This indicator is grouped according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) c...
89. CC
acronym for Complications and Comorbidities (CC)
90. CCF
acronym for Congestive Cardiac Failure (CCF)
91. CCHS
acronym for Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS)
92. CCI
acronym for Canadian Classification of Health Interventions (CCI)
93. CD
acronym for Census Division (CD)
94. CDPAC
acronym for Chronic Disease Prevention Alliance of Canada (CDPAC)
95. Celiac Disease
Also known as gluten intolerance, an immune disease related to the body’s inability to digest gluten (a protein in wheat, rye and barley and certain other food and personal products). With celiac disease, eating foods with gluten results in damage to th...
96. Census Agglomeration (CA)
Statistics Canada defined, in the 2001 and 1996 census, as a very large urban area (or urban core) together with adjacent urban and rural areas that have a high degree of social and economic integration with the urban core. A CA has a minimum urban popula...
97. Census Division (CD)
Statistics Canada defined, in the 2001 and 1996 census, as areas (e.g. counties, regional districts, regional municipalities) established by provincial law, which are intermediate geographic areas between the municipality and the provincial.
98. Census Family
concept/Social Determinants of Health-SDOH-Digital Library-Image.jpg According to Statistics Canada, refers to couples (married or common-law), with or without...
99. Census Family Income
Census family income, according to Statistics Canada, is the sum of incomes of all members of the census family.
100. Census Metropolitan Area (CMA)
Statistics Canada defined, in the 2001 and 1996 census, as a very large urban area (or urban core) together with adjacent urban and rural areas that have a high degree of social and economic integration with the urban core. A CMA has a minimum urban popul...

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Community Health Sciences, Max Rady College of Medicine,
Rady Faculty of Health Sciences,
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