Title
Estimating chronic disease prevalence among the remote Aboriginal population of the Northern Territory using multiple data sources
Series
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Vol. 32 no. 4
Abstract
Objective: To determine the prevalence rates of hypertension, diabetes, ischaemic heart disease (IHD), renal disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and their co-occurrence among the remote Aboriginal population of the Northern Territory (NT) in 2005. Methods: Information from a primary care chronic disease register (CDR) and hospital inpatient database were linked to a population list by using a unique patient
identifier. A capture-recapture method (CRM) and multivariate log-linear models were then applied to analyse the multiple datasets to estimate the prevalence rates for the selected diseases and case ascertainment in each data source. Results: The NT remote Aboriginal communities had considerably higher prevalence rates across all five chronic diseases than national health survey
figures. At ages 50 years and over, the prevalence rates for hypertension and renal disease were above 50%, diabetes 40%, COPD 30% and IHD above 20%. In terms of data completeness, CDR and hospital sources were both relatively incomplete, generally around 20−60%. The most common co-occurrences for
the five chronic diseases were between hypertension, diabetes, IHD and renal disease. Conclusions and implications: The
prevalence rates calculated using this method are comparable to estimates from rigorous small area studies, but are markedly higher than those from single clinical data sources. The results indicate
that there is a considerable underdiagnosis
of preventable chronic diseases in the Aboriginal communities.
identifier. A capture-recapture method (CRM) and multivariate log-linear models were then applied to analyse the multiple datasets to estimate the prevalence rates for the selected diseases and case ascertainment in each data source. Results: The NT remote Aboriginal communities had considerably higher prevalence rates across all five chronic diseases than national health survey
figures. At ages 50 years and over, the prevalence rates for hypertension and renal disease were above 50%, diabetes 40%, COPD 30% and IHD above 20%. In terms of data completeness, CDR and hospital sources were both relatively incomplete, generally around 20−60%. The most common co-occurrences for
the five chronic diseases were between hypertension, diabetes, IHD and renal disease. Conclusions and implications: The
prevalence rates calculated using this method are comparable to estimates from rigorous small area studies, but are markedly higher than those from single clinical data sources. The results indicate
that there is a considerable underdiagnosis
of preventable chronic diseases in the Aboriginal communities.
Publication information
Zhao Y, Connors C, Wright J, Guthridge S, Bailie R. Estimating chronic disease prevalence among the remote Aboriginal population of the Northern Territory using multiple data sources. Aust. and NZ Journal of Public Health 2008 Aug.;32(4):307-313
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
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ChronicDiseasePrevalence.doc
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Format
Microsoft Word
Checksum
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Date Issued
2008-08
Type
Journal Article
Description
Wiley-Blackwell, the publisher of ANZHPH, doesn't allow the published article to be re-published in an institutional repository. The deposited version is the text as accepted for publication. The definitive version of this article is available at http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/121371366/PDFSTART.
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