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Inaccurate Ascertainment of Morbidity and Mortality due to Influenza in Administrative Databases: A Population-Based Record Linkage Study

BACKGROUND: Historically, counting influenza recorded in administrative health outcome databases has been considered insufficient to estimate influenza attributable morbidity and mortality in populations. We used database record linkage to evaluate whether modern databases have similar limitations....

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Autores principales: Muscatello, David J., Amin, Janaki, MacIntyre, C. Raina, Newall, Anthony T., Rawlinson, William D., Sintchenko, Vitali, Gilmour, Robin, Thackway, Sarah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4038604/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24875306
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098446
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author Muscatello, David J.
Amin, Janaki
MacIntyre, C. Raina
Newall, Anthony T.
Rawlinson, William D.
Sintchenko, Vitali
Gilmour, Robin
Thackway, Sarah
author_facet Muscatello, David J.
Amin, Janaki
MacIntyre, C. Raina
Newall, Anthony T.
Rawlinson, William D.
Sintchenko, Vitali
Gilmour, Robin
Thackway, Sarah
author_sort Muscatello, David J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Historically, counting influenza recorded in administrative health outcome databases has been considered insufficient to estimate influenza attributable morbidity and mortality in populations. We used database record linkage to evaluate whether modern databases have similar limitations. METHODS: Person-level records were linked across databases of laboratory notified influenza, emergency department (ED) presentations, hospital admissions and death registrations, from the population (∼6.9 million) of New South Wales (NSW), Australia, 2005 to 2008. RESULTS: There were 2568 virologically diagnosed influenza infections notified. Among those, 25% of 40 who died, 49% of 1451 with a hospital admission and 7% of 1742 with an ED presentation had influenza recorded on the respective database record. Compared with persons aged ≥65 years and residents of regional and remote areas, respectively, children and residents of major cities were more likely to have influenza coded on their admission record. Compared with older persons and admitted patients, respectively, working age persons and non-admitted persons were more likely to have influenza coded on their ED record. On both ED and admission records, persons with influenza type A infection were more likely than those with type B infection to have influenza coded. Among death registrations, hospital admissions and ED presentations with influenza recorded as a cause of illness, 15%, 28% and 1.4%, respectively, also had laboratory notified influenza. Time trends in counts of influenza recorded on the ED, admission and death databases reflected the trend in counts of virologically diagnosed influenza. CONCLUSIONS: A minority of the death, hospital admission and ED records for persons with a virologically diagnosed influenza infection identified influenza as a cause of illness. Few database records with influenza recorded as a cause had laboratory confirmation. The databases have limited value for estimating incidence of influenza outcomes, but can be used for monitoring variation in incidence over time.
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spelling pubmed-40386042014-06-05 Inaccurate Ascertainment of Morbidity and Mortality due to Influenza in Administrative Databases: A Population-Based Record Linkage Study Muscatello, David J. Amin, Janaki MacIntyre, C. Raina Newall, Anthony T. Rawlinson, William D. Sintchenko, Vitali Gilmour, Robin Thackway, Sarah PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Historically, counting influenza recorded in administrative health outcome databases has been considered insufficient to estimate influenza attributable morbidity and mortality in populations. We used database record linkage to evaluate whether modern databases have similar limitations. METHODS: Person-level records were linked across databases of laboratory notified influenza, emergency department (ED) presentations, hospital admissions and death registrations, from the population (∼6.9 million) of New South Wales (NSW), Australia, 2005 to 2008. RESULTS: There were 2568 virologically diagnosed influenza infections notified. Among those, 25% of 40 who died, 49% of 1451 with a hospital admission and 7% of 1742 with an ED presentation had influenza recorded on the respective database record. Compared with persons aged ≥65 years and residents of regional and remote areas, respectively, children and residents of major cities were more likely to have influenza coded on their admission record. Compared with older persons and admitted patients, respectively, working age persons and non-admitted persons were more likely to have influenza coded on their ED record. On both ED and admission records, persons with influenza type A infection were more likely than those with type B infection to have influenza coded. Among death registrations, hospital admissions and ED presentations with influenza recorded as a cause of illness, 15%, 28% and 1.4%, respectively, also had laboratory notified influenza. Time trends in counts of influenza recorded on the ED, admission and death databases reflected the trend in counts of virologically diagnosed influenza. CONCLUSIONS: A minority of the death, hospital admission and ED records for persons with a virologically diagnosed influenza infection identified influenza as a cause of illness. Few database records with influenza recorded as a cause had laboratory confirmation. The databases have limited value for estimating incidence of influenza outcomes, but can be used for monitoring variation in incidence over time. Public Library of Science 2014-05-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4038604/ /pubmed/24875306 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098446 Text en © 2014 Muscatello et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Muscatello, David J.
Amin, Janaki
MacIntyre, C. Raina
Newall, Anthony T.
Rawlinson, William D.
Sintchenko, Vitali
Gilmour, Robin
Thackway, Sarah
Inaccurate Ascertainment of Morbidity and Mortality due to Influenza in Administrative Databases: A Population-Based Record Linkage Study
title Inaccurate Ascertainment of Morbidity and Mortality due to Influenza in Administrative Databases: A Population-Based Record Linkage Study
title_full Inaccurate Ascertainment of Morbidity and Mortality due to Influenza in Administrative Databases: A Population-Based Record Linkage Study
title_fullStr Inaccurate Ascertainment of Morbidity and Mortality due to Influenza in Administrative Databases: A Population-Based Record Linkage Study
title_full_unstemmed Inaccurate Ascertainment of Morbidity and Mortality due to Influenza in Administrative Databases: A Population-Based Record Linkage Study
title_short Inaccurate Ascertainment of Morbidity and Mortality due to Influenza in Administrative Databases: A Population-Based Record Linkage Study
title_sort inaccurate ascertainment of morbidity and mortality due to influenza in administrative databases: a population-based record linkage study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4038604/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24875306
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098446
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