Quality assessment of linked Canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death data

Introduction Three Canadian clinical-administrative hospital databases were linked to the Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database (CVSD) to provide information about patients who died following discharge from hospital as well as supplementary information about patients that died in-hospital. Qualit...

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Main Authors: Nancy Rodrigues, Maureen Kelly, Tobi Henderson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2018-09-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/978
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spelling doaj-7552ead515bc41f7bd3f90728ee51d7e2020-11-24T22:45:59ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082018-09-013410.23889/ijpds.v3i4.978978Quality assessment of linked Canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death dataNancy Rodrigues0Maureen Kelly1Tobi Henderson2Canadian Institute for Health InformationCanadian Institute for Health InformationCanadian Institute for Health InformationIntroduction Three Canadian clinical-administrative hospital databases were linked to the Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database (CVSD) to provide information about patients who died following discharge from hospital as well as supplementary information about patients that died in-hospital. Quality was assessed using a guided approach and through feedback from initial users. Objectives and Approach The linked datasets were created to develop and validate health care indicators and performance measures and perform outcome analyses. It is therefore imperative to evaluate the data’s fitness for use. Quality was assessed by calculating coverage of deaths for all linked contributors, creating a profile of the linked dataset and analyzing issues that were identified by users. These analyses were guided by an existing Data Source Assessment Tool, which provides a set of criteria that allow for assessment across five dimensions of quality, thus allowing for appropriate determination of a given set of data’s fitness for use. Results Deterministic linkage of the datasets resulted in linkage rates that ranged from 66.9% to 90.9% depending on the dataset or data year. Linkage rates also varied by Canadian jurisdictions and patient cohort. Variables had good data availability with rates of 95% or higher. Initial users identified a significant number of duplicate records that were flagged to and corrected by the data supplier. 1.4\% of acute hospital deaths had discrepancies in the death date captured in the two linked sources; the vast majority had a difference of only one day. A user group and issue tracking process were created to share information about the linked data and guarantee that issues are triaged to the appropriate party and allow for timely follow up with the data supplier. Conclusion/Implications Documentation provided by the data supplier was vital to understanding the linkage methodology and its impact on linkage rates. A guided data assessment ensured that strengths and limitations were identified and shared to support appropriate use. Feedback to the data supplier is supporting ongoing improvements to the linkage methodology.https://ijpds.org/article/view/978
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nancy Rodrigues
Maureen Kelly
Tobi Henderson
spellingShingle Nancy Rodrigues
Maureen Kelly
Tobi Henderson
Quality assessment of linked Canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death data
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Nancy Rodrigues
Maureen Kelly
Tobi Henderson
author_sort Nancy Rodrigues
title Quality assessment of linked Canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death data
title_short Quality assessment of linked Canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death data
title_full Quality assessment of linked Canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death data
title_fullStr Quality assessment of linked Canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death data
title_full_unstemmed Quality assessment of linked Canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death data
title_sort quality assessment of linked canadian clinical administrative hospital and vital statistics death data
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Introduction Three Canadian clinical-administrative hospital databases were linked to the Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database (CVSD) to provide information about patients who died following discharge from hospital as well as supplementary information about patients that died in-hospital. Quality was assessed using a guided approach and through feedback from initial users. Objectives and Approach The linked datasets were created to develop and validate health care indicators and performance measures and perform outcome analyses. It is therefore imperative to evaluate the data’s fitness for use. Quality was assessed by calculating coverage of deaths for all linked contributors, creating a profile of the linked dataset and analyzing issues that were identified by users. These analyses were guided by an existing Data Source Assessment Tool, which provides a set of criteria that allow for assessment across five dimensions of quality, thus allowing for appropriate determination of a given set of data’s fitness for use. Results Deterministic linkage of the datasets resulted in linkage rates that ranged from 66.9% to 90.9% depending on the dataset or data year. Linkage rates also varied by Canadian jurisdictions and patient cohort. Variables had good data availability with rates of 95% or higher. Initial users identified a significant number of duplicate records that were flagged to and corrected by the data supplier. 1.4\% of acute hospital deaths had discrepancies in the death date captured in the two linked sources; the vast majority had a difference of only one day. A user group and issue tracking process were created to share information about the linked data and guarantee that issues are triaged to the appropriate party and allow for timely follow up with the data supplier. Conclusion/Implications Documentation provided by the data supplier was vital to understanding the linkage methodology and its impact on linkage rates. A guided data assessment ensured that strengths and limitations were identified and shared to support appropriate use. Feedback to the data supplier is supporting ongoing improvements to the linkage methodology.
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/978
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