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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10137/295
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| Title: | Validation of patient demographic data, Northern Territory hospitals, 2008 |
| Other Titles: | NT hospital data validation 2008 |
| Authors: | Tew, Kara You, Judy Pircher, Sabine |
| Keywords: | public hospitals demography validation data |
| Issue Date: | 2008 |
| Publisher: | Health Gains Planning, DHF |
| Citation: | Tew K, You J, Pircher S. Validation of patient demographic data: Northern Territory Hospitals, 2008. Northern Territory Department of Health and Families, Darwin, 2008. |
| Abstract: | Accurate recording and updating of hospital administrative data for inpatients is critical to the management of hospitals, statistical reporting and the planning of future policy and funding. In the Northern Territory (NT), the patient management system CareSys is used to record patient care details and key demographic information. CareSys is used across all five NT public hospitals.
Central to statistical reporting is the quality of demographic information contained in hospital records: age, gender, Indigenous status and place of residence. Accurate collection of all key demographic items is important, however, Indigenous status and place of residence are particularly important. The accurate recording of Indigenous status is vital in the NT due to the proportionally high Indigenous population compared to other states and territories. Monitoring service use by the NT Indigenous population is essential to establishing the success of various health initiatives, identifying where gaps exist in health service provision, and determining funding of future programs and campaigns. Accurate collection of a patient’s usual place of residence allows identification of patients from interstate, allowing for cross-border charging, as all states and territories are required to meet the cost of their residents’ inpatient services regardless of where treatment is received in Australia. Place of usual residence also shows where the greatest need for hospital services exist in the NT, and highlights travel costs associated with the provision of hospital services. The study found high levels of agreement between the hospital dataset and interview dataset for all variables; sex (99%), Indigenous status (97%), country of birth (98%), year of birth (94%), date of birth (90%) and NT health district of residence (88%). A comparison between the 1997 and 2008 levels of observed agreement for the key demographic variables shows improvements for all variables, with the exception of sex which remained unchanged. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10137/295 |
| ISBN: | 0977513483 |
| Appears in Collections: | Open Access Collection
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Files in This Item:
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Size | Format |
| validation_report_001 21Nov.pdf | | 446Kb | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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