Effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthma

ABSTRACT Background Annual prevalence of 'treated asthma' can be estimated using primary care routine data. However, the denominator may include people with incomplete registration at general practices (GP) in the year of estimation. Patients with incomplete registrations who actually tak...

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Main Authors: Mohammad Al Sallakh, Sarah Rodgers, Aziz Sheikh, Ronan Lyons, Gwyneth Davies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2017-04-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/233
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spelling doaj-d006a6ff8f9d4240b13f224a834d0fe52020-11-25T00:46:15ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082017-04-011110.23889/ijpds.v1i1.233233Effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthmaMohammad Al Sallakh0Sarah Rodgers1Aziz Sheikh2Ronan Lyons3Gwyneth Davies4Swansea University Medical SchoolSwansea University Medical SchoolAllergy and Respiratory Research Group, Centre for Population Health Sciences, The University of EdinburghSwansea University Medical SchoolSwansea University Medical SchoolABSTRACT Background Annual prevalence of 'treated asthma' can be estimated using primary care routine data. However, the denominator may include people with incomplete registration at general practices (GP) in the year of estimation. Patients with incomplete registrations who actually take medications but have no recorded prescriptions represent false-negative cases leading to underestimated prevalence. Objectives To estimate the effect of incomplete GP registrations on the annual prevalence of treated asthma in Wales. Methods Using the GP dataset of the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank, we created a denominator of people who lived in Wales and registered at Welsh GPs for any period during 2010. For the uncorrected prevalence, the numerator included people who ever had a recorded asthma diagnosis and any current recorded asthma prescriptions. For the corrected prevalence, we estimated the number of false-negatives and added them to the numerator. To do that, we calculated, for asthma patients with incomplete registrations and no recorded prescriptions, the sum of probabilities of having prescriptions if they had complete registrations. We estimated the absolute and relative increases in the prevalence at national and local authority levels as well as for the subpopulation with incomplete registration. Results The denominator included 2,221,967 people, of whom 94.8% had complete GP registration in 2010. Without correction, the numerator included 132,439 patients giving a prevalence of 5.96% [95% CI 5.93-5.99]. By adding estimated 1,801 false-negative cases to the numerator, the adjusted prevalence is 6.04% [95% CI 6.01-6.07] with absolute and relative increases of 0.08% and 1.36%, respectively. At the local authority level, the relative increase ranged from 0.47% for Blaenau Gwent to 3.94% for Monmouthshire. Among the subpopulation with incomplete registration (5.1%), the prevalence increased by 68.0% from 2.32% to 3.91%. Conclusion In Wales, which has a highly stable population, incomplete GP registration has negligible effect on the prevalence of treated asthma at a national level, although it was more significant for sub-regions with less stable populations. This correction method could be useful for more accurate estimation of asthma burden and the prevalence of active disease in highly dynamic populations. Funding Health and Care Research Wales and ABMU Health Board. Supported by Asthma UK Centre for Applied Research [AUK-AC-2012-01].https://ijpds.org/article/view/233
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammad Al Sallakh
Sarah Rodgers
Aziz Sheikh
Ronan Lyons
Gwyneth Davies
spellingShingle Mohammad Al Sallakh
Sarah Rodgers
Aziz Sheikh
Ronan Lyons
Gwyneth Davies
Effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthma
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Mohammad Al Sallakh
Sarah Rodgers
Aziz Sheikh
Ronan Lyons
Gwyneth Davies
author_sort Mohammad Al Sallakh
title Effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthma
title_short Effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthma
title_full Effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthma
title_fullStr Effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthma
title_full_unstemmed Effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthma
title_sort effect of incomplete registration at general practices on the annual prevalence of treated asthma
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2017-04-01
description ABSTRACT Background Annual prevalence of 'treated asthma' can be estimated using primary care routine data. However, the denominator may include people with incomplete registration at general practices (GP) in the year of estimation. Patients with incomplete registrations who actually take medications but have no recorded prescriptions represent false-negative cases leading to underestimated prevalence. Objectives To estimate the effect of incomplete GP registrations on the annual prevalence of treated asthma in Wales. Methods Using the GP dataset of the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank, we created a denominator of people who lived in Wales and registered at Welsh GPs for any period during 2010. For the uncorrected prevalence, the numerator included people who ever had a recorded asthma diagnosis and any current recorded asthma prescriptions. For the corrected prevalence, we estimated the number of false-negatives and added them to the numerator. To do that, we calculated, for asthma patients with incomplete registrations and no recorded prescriptions, the sum of probabilities of having prescriptions if they had complete registrations. We estimated the absolute and relative increases in the prevalence at national and local authority levels as well as for the subpopulation with incomplete registration. Results The denominator included 2,221,967 people, of whom 94.8% had complete GP registration in 2010. Without correction, the numerator included 132,439 patients giving a prevalence of 5.96% [95% CI 5.93-5.99]. By adding estimated 1,801 false-negative cases to the numerator, the adjusted prevalence is 6.04% [95% CI 6.01-6.07] with absolute and relative increases of 0.08% and 1.36%, respectively. At the local authority level, the relative increase ranged from 0.47% for Blaenau Gwent to 3.94% for Monmouthshire. Among the subpopulation with incomplete registration (5.1%), the prevalence increased by 68.0% from 2.32% to 3.91%. Conclusion In Wales, which has a highly stable population, incomplete GP registration has negligible effect on the prevalence of treated asthma at a national level, although it was more significant for sub-regions with less stable populations. This correction method could be useful for more accurate estimation of asthma burden and the prevalence of active disease in highly dynamic populations. Funding Health and Care Research Wales and ABMU Health Board. Supported by Asthma UK Centre for Applied Research [AUK-AC-2012-01].
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/233
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