Validation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in New South Wales, Australia

Abstract Objective Hospital data are a useful resource for studying pregnancy complications, including bleeding-related conditions, however, the reliability of these data is unclear. This study aims to examine reliability of reporting of bleeding-related conditions, including anaemia, obstetric haem...

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Main Authors: Heather J. Baldwin, Tanya A. Nippita, Siranda Torvaldsen, Therese M. McGee, Kristen Rickard, Jillian A. Patterson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:BMC Research Notes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-021-05584-x
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spelling doaj-45730e5e12064c96ab9b947beeb3640d2021-05-09T11:39:41ZengBMCBMC Research Notes1756-05002021-05-011411810.1186/s13104-021-05584-xValidation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in New South Wales, AustraliaHeather J. Baldwin0Tanya A. Nippita1Siranda Torvaldsen2Therese M. McGee3Kristen Rickard4Jillian A. Patterson5The University of Sydney Northern Clinical School, Women and Babies ResearchThe University of Sydney Northern Clinical School, Women and Babies ResearchThe University of Sydney Northern Clinical School, Women and Babies ResearchOG Department, Clinical Support Unit, Level 3, G Block, Westmead HospitalThe University of Sydney Northern Clinical School, Women and Babies ResearchThe University of Sydney Northern Clinical School, Women and Babies ResearchAbstract Objective Hospital data are a useful resource for studying pregnancy complications, including bleeding-related conditions, however, the reliability of these data is unclear. This study aims to examine reliability of reporting of bleeding-related conditions, including anaemia, obstetric haemorrhage and blood disorders, and procedures, such as blood transfusion and hysterectomy, in coded hospital records compared with obstetric data from two large tertiary hospitals in New South Wales. Results There were 36,051 births between 2011 and 2015 included in the analysis. Anaemia and blood disorders were poorly reported in the hospital data, with sensitivity ranging from 2.5% to 24.8% (positive predictive value (PPV) 12.0–82.6%). Reporting of postpartum haemorrhage, transfusion and hysterectomy showed high sensitivity (82.8–96.0%, PPV 78.0–89.6%) while moderate consistency with the obstetric data was observed for other types of obstetric haemorrhage (sensitivity: 41.9–65.1%, PPV: 50.0–56.8%) and placental complications (sensitivity: 68.2–81.3%, PPV: 20.3–72.3%). Our findings suggest that hospital data may be a reliable source of information on postpartum haemorrhage, transfusion and hysterectomy. However, they highlight the need for caution for studies of anaemia and blood disorders, given high rates of uncoded and ‘false’ cases, and suggest that other sources of data should be sought where possible.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-021-05584-xValidityAnaemiaHaemorrhageBlood disordersPlatelet disordersCoagulation disorders
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heather J. Baldwin
Tanya A. Nippita
Siranda Torvaldsen
Therese M. McGee
Kristen Rickard
Jillian A. Patterson
spellingShingle Heather J. Baldwin
Tanya A. Nippita
Siranda Torvaldsen
Therese M. McGee
Kristen Rickard
Jillian A. Patterson
Validation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in New South Wales, Australia
BMC Research Notes
Validity
Anaemia
Haemorrhage
Blood disorders
Platelet disorders
Coagulation disorders
author_facet Heather J. Baldwin
Tanya A. Nippita
Siranda Torvaldsen
Therese M. McGee
Kristen Rickard
Jillian A. Patterson
author_sort Heather J. Baldwin
title Validation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in New South Wales, Australia
title_short Validation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in New South Wales, Australia
title_full Validation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in New South Wales, Australia
title_fullStr Validation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in New South Wales, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Validation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in New South Wales, Australia
title_sort validation of anaemia, haemorrhage and blood disorder reporting in hospital data in new south wales, australia
publisher BMC
series BMC Research Notes
issn 1756-0500
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Objective Hospital data are a useful resource for studying pregnancy complications, including bleeding-related conditions, however, the reliability of these data is unclear. This study aims to examine reliability of reporting of bleeding-related conditions, including anaemia, obstetric haemorrhage and blood disorders, and procedures, such as blood transfusion and hysterectomy, in coded hospital records compared with obstetric data from two large tertiary hospitals in New South Wales. Results There were 36,051 births between 2011 and 2015 included in the analysis. Anaemia and blood disorders were poorly reported in the hospital data, with sensitivity ranging from 2.5% to 24.8% (positive predictive value (PPV) 12.0–82.6%). Reporting of postpartum haemorrhage, transfusion and hysterectomy showed high sensitivity (82.8–96.0%, PPV 78.0–89.6%) while moderate consistency with the obstetric data was observed for other types of obstetric haemorrhage (sensitivity: 41.9–65.1%, PPV: 50.0–56.8%) and placental complications (sensitivity: 68.2–81.3%, PPV: 20.3–72.3%). Our findings suggest that hospital data may be a reliable source of information on postpartum haemorrhage, transfusion and hysterectomy. However, they highlight the need for caution for studies of anaemia and blood disorders, given high rates of uncoded and ‘false’ cases, and suggest that other sources of data should be sought where possible.
topic Validity
Anaemia
Haemorrhage
Blood disorders
Platelet disorders
Coagulation disorders
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-021-05584-x
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