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Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance I: The Application of Health Care Use Data in Alameda County, California

INTRODUCTION: The ability to conduct community-level asthma surveillance is increasingly crucial for public health programming and child health advocacy. We explored the potential and limitations of health care use records from both public and private sources for asthma surveillance in a California...

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Autores principales: English, Paul B, Roberts, Eric M, Van den Eeden, Stephen K, Ray, G. Thomas
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1637799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16776892
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author English, Paul B
Roberts, Eric M
Van den Eeden, Stephen K
Ray, G. Thomas
author_facet English, Paul B
Roberts, Eric M
Van den Eeden, Stephen K
Ray, G. Thomas
author_sort English, Paul B
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The ability to conduct community-level asthma surveillance is increasingly crucial for public health programming and child health advocacy. We explored the potential and limitations of health care use records from both public and private sources for asthma surveillance in a California county. METHODS: We combined administrative patient record data from Kaiser Permanente of Northern California and Medi-Cal (the California Medicaid program) for Alameda County residents during 2001. We assessed the resulting data set for completeness, population representation, consistency with external data, and internal indicator consistency. RESULTS: Our resulting data set included records for 226,383 children younger than 18 years. Completeness of Medicaid data was affected by managed care market share, reducing our usable data set size to 176,789, approximately equal to one of every two children in the county or one of every 3 person-months. External data documenting hospitalization rates due to asthma were poorly correlated with hospitalization rates (r = 0.2120, P = .20) but highly correlated with emergency department visits (r = 0.8607, P <.001) in the resulting data set. High internal consistency of indicators suggested that the data set represented a broad spectrum of health care access and quality of care congruent with clinical aspects of the disease. CONCLUSION: The utility of these data is affected by logistical and administrative factors, including the health care payment structure and the market shares of care providers. These factors can be expected to similarly affect the utility of this approach in other counties. Our ability to generate county-level health statistics for comparison with other locations was limited, although the data set appeared well suited for within-county geographic analysis. In light of these findings, these data have the potential to expand the local health surveillance capacity of communities.
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spelling pubmed-16377992006-12-06 Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance I: The Application of Health Care Use Data in Alameda County, California English, Paul B Roberts, Eric M Van den Eeden, Stephen K Ray, G. Thomas Prev Chronic Dis Original Research INTRODUCTION: The ability to conduct community-level asthma surveillance is increasingly crucial for public health programming and child health advocacy. We explored the potential and limitations of health care use records from both public and private sources for asthma surveillance in a California county. METHODS: We combined administrative patient record data from Kaiser Permanente of Northern California and Medi-Cal (the California Medicaid program) for Alameda County residents during 2001. We assessed the resulting data set for completeness, population representation, consistency with external data, and internal indicator consistency. RESULTS: Our resulting data set included records for 226,383 children younger than 18 years. Completeness of Medicaid data was affected by managed care market share, reducing our usable data set size to 176,789, approximately equal to one of every two children in the county or one of every 3 person-months. External data documenting hospitalization rates due to asthma were poorly correlated with hospitalization rates (r = 0.2120, P = .20) but highly correlated with emergency department visits (r = 0.8607, P <.001) in the resulting data set. High internal consistency of indicators suggested that the data set represented a broad spectrum of health care access and quality of care congruent with clinical aspects of the disease. CONCLUSION: The utility of these data is affected by logistical and administrative factors, including the health care payment structure and the market shares of care providers. These factors can be expected to similarly affect the utility of this approach in other counties. Our ability to generate county-level health statistics for comparison with other locations was limited, although the data set appeared well suited for within-county geographic analysis. In light of these findings, these data have the potential to expand the local health surveillance capacity of communities. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2006-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC1637799/ /pubmed/16776892 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is a publication of the U.S. Government. This publication is in the public domain and is therefore without copyright. All text from this work may be reprinted freely. Use of these materials should be properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
English, Paul B
Roberts, Eric M
Van den Eeden, Stephen K
Ray, G. Thomas
Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance I: The Application of Health Care Use Data in Alameda County, California
title Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance I: The Application of Health Care Use Data in Alameda County, California
title_full Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance I: The Application of Health Care Use Data in Alameda County, California
title_fullStr Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance I: The Application of Health Care Use Data in Alameda County, California
title_full_unstemmed Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance I: The Application of Health Care Use Data in Alameda County, California
title_short Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance I: The Application of Health Care Use Data in Alameda County, California
title_sort progress in pediatric asthma surveillance i: the application of health care use data in alameda county, california
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1637799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16776892
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