Concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health services

Abstract Background This cross-sectional study aimed to explore, among a sample of patients attending one of four Aboriginal Health Services (ACCHSs), the degree of concordance between self-report and medical records for whether screening for key healthcare items had ever been undertaken, or had bee...

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Main Authors: Natasha Noble, Christine Paul, Justin Walsh, Kylie Wyndham, Sue Wilson, Jessica Stewart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-02-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-3930-7
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spelling doaj-ed3f6c04c115490283b75e58bda975782020-11-25T01:41:56ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632019-02-011911810.1186/s12913-019-3930-7Concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health servicesNatasha Noble0Christine Paul1Justin Walsh2Kylie Wyndham3Sue Wilson4Jessica Stewart5Priority Research Centre for Health Behaviour, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of NewcastlePriority Research Centre for Health Behaviour, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of NewcastlePriority Research Centre for Health Behaviour, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of NewcastleBulgarr Ngaru Medical Aboriginal Corporation, Richmond Valley ClinicDurri Aboriginal Corporation Medical ServiceNSW Department of Family & Community Services- Business ServicesAbstract Background This cross-sectional study aimed to explore, among a sample of patients attending one of four Aboriginal Health Services (ACCHSs), the degree of concordance between self-report and medical records for whether screening for key healthcare items had ever been undertaken, or had been undertaken within the recommended timeframe. Methods Across the four ACCHSs, a convenience sample of 109 patients was recruited. Patients completed a self-report computer survey assessing when they last had preventive care items undertaken at the service. ACCHS staff completed a medical record audit for matching items. The degree of concordance (i.e. the percentage of cases in which self-reports matched responses from the medical record) was calculated. Results Concordance was relatively high for items including assessment of Body Mass Index and blood pressure, but was substantially lower for items including assessment of waist circumference, alcohol intake, physical activity, and diet. Conclusions Reliance on either patient self-report or medical record data for assessing the level of preventive care service delivery by ACCHSs requires caution. Efforts to improve documentation of some preventive care delivery in medical records are needed. These findings are likely to also apply to patients in other general practice settings.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-3930-7AboriginalIndigenousSelf-reportMedical recordAgreementConcordance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natasha Noble
Christine Paul
Justin Walsh
Kylie Wyndham
Sue Wilson
Jessica Stewart
spellingShingle Natasha Noble
Christine Paul
Justin Walsh
Kylie Wyndham
Sue Wilson
Jessica Stewart
Concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health services
BMC Health Services Research
Aboriginal
Indigenous
Self-report
Medical record
Agreement
Concordance
author_facet Natasha Noble
Christine Paul
Justin Walsh
Kylie Wyndham
Sue Wilson
Jessica Stewart
author_sort Natasha Noble
title Concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health services
title_short Concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health services
title_full Concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health services
title_fullStr Concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health services
title_full_unstemmed Concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health services
title_sort concordance between self-report and medical records of preventive healthcare delivery among a sample of disadvantaged patients from four aboriginal community controlled health services
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Background This cross-sectional study aimed to explore, among a sample of patients attending one of four Aboriginal Health Services (ACCHSs), the degree of concordance between self-report and medical records for whether screening for key healthcare items had ever been undertaken, or had been undertaken within the recommended timeframe. Methods Across the four ACCHSs, a convenience sample of 109 patients was recruited. Patients completed a self-report computer survey assessing when they last had preventive care items undertaken at the service. ACCHS staff completed a medical record audit for matching items. The degree of concordance (i.e. the percentage of cases in which self-reports matched responses from the medical record) was calculated. Results Concordance was relatively high for items including assessment of Body Mass Index and blood pressure, but was substantially lower for items including assessment of waist circumference, alcohol intake, physical activity, and diet. Conclusions Reliance on either patient self-report or medical record data for assessing the level of preventive care service delivery by ACCHSs requires caution. Efforts to improve documentation of some preventive care delivery in medical records are needed. These findings are likely to also apply to patients in other general practice settings.
topic Aboriginal
Indigenous
Self-report
Medical record
Agreement
Concordance
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-3930-7
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