Visualisation and optimisation of alcohol-related hospital admissions ICD-10 codes in Welsh e-cohort data

The excessive consumption of alcohol is detrimental to long term health and increases the likelihood of hospital admission. However, definitions of alcohol-related hospital admission vary, giving rise to uncertainty in the effect of alcohol on alcohol-related health care utilization. To compare diag...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of population data science 2021-03, Vol.6 (1), p.1373-1373
Hauptverfasser: Trefan, Laszl, Akbari, Ashley, Morgan, Jennifer Siân, Farewell, Daniel Mark, Fone, David, Lyons, Ronan A, Jones Hywel, Merfyn, Moore, Simon C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The excessive consumption of alcohol is detrimental to long term health and increases the likelihood of hospital admission. However, definitions of alcohol-related hospital admission vary, giving rise to uncertainty in the effect of alcohol on alcohol-related health care utilization. To compare diagnostic codes on hospital admission and discharge and to determine the ideal combination of codes necessary for an accurate determination of alcohol-related hospital admission. Routine population-linked e-cohort data were extracted from the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank containing all alcohol-related hospital admissions (n,= 92,553) from 2006 to 2011 in Wales, United Kingdom. The distributions of the diagnostic codes recorded at admission and discharge were compared. By calculating a misclassification rate (sensitivity-like measure) the appropriate number of coding fields to examine for alcohol-codes was established. There was agreement between admission and discharge codes. When more than ten coding fields were used the misclassification rate was less than 1%. With the data at present and alcohol-related codes used, codes recorded at admission and discharge can be used equivalently to identify alcohol-related admissions. The appropriate number of coding fields to examine was established: fewer than ten is likely to lead to under-reporting of alcohol-related admissions. The methods developed here can be applied to other medical conditions that can be described using a certain set of diagnostic codes, each of which can be a known sole cause of the condition and recorded in multiple positions in e-cohort data.
ISSN:2399-4908
2399-4908
DOI:10.23889/ijpds.v6i1.1373