Using Administrative Health Data to Define a Cohort of Youth Affected by Chronic Health Conditions: Preparing for Cross-Sectoral Data Linkage

Introduction In Alberta, 2,400 youth with chronic needs transition to adulthood every year, and many are not prepared for this change. Transferring youth from pediatric to adult-oriented care is poorly managed. To improve this process, we need to know how youth patients use health services during t...

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Main Authors: Kyleigh Schraeder, Olesya Barrett, Alberto Nettel-Aguirre, Gina Dimitropoulos, Andrew Mackie, Susan Samuel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2018-08-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/805
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spelling doaj-794cd43b828c46a099719f9c705e31002020-11-25T02:49:38ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082018-08-013410.23889/ijpds.v3i4.805805Using Administrative Health Data to Define a Cohort of Youth Affected by Chronic Health Conditions: Preparing for Cross-Sectoral Data LinkageKyleigh Schraeder0Olesya Barrett1Alberto Nettel-Aguirre2Gina Dimitropoulos3Andrew Mackie4Susan Samuel5University of CalgaryAlberta Health ServicesUniversity of CalgaryUniversity of CalgaryUniversity of AlbertaUniversity of Calgary Introduction In Alberta, 2,400 youth with chronic needs transition to adulthood every year, and many are not prepared for this change. Transferring youth from pediatric to adult-oriented care is poorly managed. To improve this process, we need to know how youth patients use health services during this period. Objectives and Approach We used the Alberta Health Services Corporate Data Repository (CDR-9), which collects records of ambulatory visits, to define a cohort of patients with chronic disease using pediatric tertiary care; data is available from 2008 to 2016. Personal health numbers allowed for deterministic data linkage to CDR-9, registry data (e.g., death dates, moves out of province), and area deprivation indices. Eligible patients were: (a) between ages 12-15 years in 2008 (for ≥2 years observation in adulthood, after age 18), (b) involved with a Chronic Care Clinic (CCC) at Alberta Children’s Hospital, and (c) had repeated CCC visits with ≥3 months between visits. Results We identified 26 Chronic Care Clinics (CCC) at Alberta Children’s Hospital (Calgary, Alberta), with stakeholder input. Using CDR-9, a total of 10,111 patients at the hospital were identified who were 12 to 15 years old at the start of the study window (in 2008), and who visited a CCC before age 18. Less than 1% (n=418) were excluded due to moving out of province or having an invalid personal heath number. Final sample sizes were captured across 3 algorithms (A1, A2, A3), based on frequency of CCC visits within a 2-year period: (i) A1: ≥2 CCC visits (N=4123); (ii) A2: ≥3 CCC visits (N=2242); (iii) A3: ≥4 CCC visits (N=1344). Conclusion/Implications Our identified cohort of youth affected by chronic conditions is the first of its kind in Alberta, and can answer important questions about patterns of service utilization in other sectors of care. Our next step is to link the cohort to population-level datasets (e.g., physician claims, NACRS, CIHI-DAD). https://ijpds.org/article/view/805
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kyleigh Schraeder
Olesya Barrett
Alberto Nettel-Aguirre
Gina Dimitropoulos
Andrew Mackie
Susan Samuel
spellingShingle Kyleigh Schraeder
Olesya Barrett
Alberto Nettel-Aguirre
Gina Dimitropoulos
Andrew Mackie
Susan Samuel
Using Administrative Health Data to Define a Cohort of Youth Affected by Chronic Health Conditions: Preparing for Cross-Sectoral Data Linkage
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Kyleigh Schraeder
Olesya Barrett
Alberto Nettel-Aguirre
Gina Dimitropoulos
Andrew Mackie
Susan Samuel
author_sort Kyleigh Schraeder
title Using Administrative Health Data to Define a Cohort of Youth Affected by Chronic Health Conditions: Preparing for Cross-Sectoral Data Linkage
title_short Using Administrative Health Data to Define a Cohort of Youth Affected by Chronic Health Conditions: Preparing for Cross-Sectoral Data Linkage
title_full Using Administrative Health Data to Define a Cohort of Youth Affected by Chronic Health Conditions: Preparing for Cross-Sectoral Data Linkage
title_fullStr Using Administrative Health Data to Define a Cohort of Youth Affected by Chronic Health Conditions: Preparing for Cross-Sectoral Data Linkage
title_full_unstemmed Using Administrative Health Data to Define a Cohort of Youth Affected by Chronic Health Conditions: Preparing for Cross-Sectoral Data Linkage
title_sort using administrative health data to define a cohort of youth affected by chronic health conditions: preparing for cross-sectoral data linkage
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Introduction In Alberta, 2,400 youth with chronic needs transition to adulthood every year, and many are not prepared for this change. Transferring youth from pediatric to adult-oriented care is poorly managed. To improve this process, we need to know how youth patients use health services during this period. Objectives and Approach We used the Alberta Health Services Corporate Data Repository (CDR-9), which collects records of ambulatory visits, to define a cohort of patients with chronic disease using pediatric tertiary care; data is available from 2008 to 2016. Personal health numbers allowed for deterministic data linkage to CDR-9, registry data (e.g., death dates, moves out of province), and area deprivation indices. Eligible patients were: (a) between ages 12-15 years in 2008 (for ≥2 years observation in adulthood, after age 18), (b) involved with a Chronic Care Clinic (CCC) at Alberta Children’s Hospital, and (c) had repeated CCC visits with ≥3 months between visits. Results We identified 26 Chronic Care Clinics (CCC) at Alberta Children’s Hospital (Calgary, Alberta), with stakeholder input. Using CDR-9, a total of 10,111 patients at the hospital were identified who were 12 to 15 years old at the start of the study window (in 2008), and who visited a CCC before age 18. Less than 1% (n=418) were excluded due to moving out of province or having an invalid personal heath number. Final sample sizes were captured across 3 algorithms (A1, A2, A3), based on frequency of CCC visits within a 2-year period: (i) A1: ≥2 CCC visits (N=4123); (ii) A2: ≥3 CCC visits (N=2242); (iii) A3: ≥4 CCC visits (N=1344). Conclusion/Implications Our identified cohort of youth affected by chronic conditions is the first of its kind in Alberta, and can answer important questions about patterns of service utilization in other sectors of care. Our next step is to link the cohort to population-level datasets (e.g., physician claims, NACRS, CIHI-DAD).
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/805
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