Indigenous Australians suffer the highest mortality and morbidity rates of any ethnic minority in the developed world. To determine if the health outcome gulf between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians also applied to seizures, we conducted a retrospective analysis of seizure hospitalization (1998-2004) based on ethnicity (indigenous (I) and non-indigenous (NI)) for four Australian jurisdictions-Northern Territory (NT), Queensland (Qld), South Australia (SA), and Western Australia (WA). Total admissions were converted to age-standardized rates (ASR) and I/NI ASR ratios (I/NIRR) and compared across multiple variables. The summed admission (combined jurisdictions over six years) was 71,185 (I = 11,593 and NI = 59,592). Seizure hospitalization rate was always higher in the indigenous population (six-year I/NIRR - NT = 5.6, Qld = 4.0, SA = 6.4, and WA = 10.9; combined jurisdictions = 5.6). Disparity was greatest for ages 40-64 years (13.8) and 15-39 years (7.0) and for indigenous males (7.4). As socioeconomic status rose, non-indigenous admission rates fell (ASR = 1.7 to 1.1), yet indigenous admission rates rose (ASR = 7.9 to 14.0). Indigenous emergency to elective admission ratios were higher (I = 27 and NI = 8), as were readmissions (1.5-2 fold), self-discharge separations (I = 9.4% and NI = 1.4%), bed days (I/NIRR = 5.1), and admissions with an additional diagnosis (I/NIRR = 3.3) or procedure (I/NIRR = 3.4). Indigenous Australians maintained disproportionately high rates of emergency seizure hospitalization; from 1998 to 2004, the combined jurisdiction rate was more than five times the mean non-indigenous rate. Indigenous males aged 15-64 years were overrepresented. Indigenous patients had lengthier admissions but higher self-discharge and readmission rates. The socioeconomic data raise the concern that social disadvantage restricts access to hospital-based seizure care for indigenous patients. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.