National Healthcare Agreement: PI 09-Incidence of heart attacks (acute coronary events), 2017 QS
Data Quality Statement Attributes
Identifying and definitional attributes | |
Metadata item type: | Data Quality Statement |
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METEOR identifier: | 630419 |
Registration status: | Health!, Standard 31/01/2017 |
Data quality | |
Data quality statement summary: |
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Institutional environment: | The AIHW has calculated this indicator using data extracted from the AIHW NHMD, the NMD and Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) population data. The AIHW is a national agency set up by the Australian Government under the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Act 1987 to provide reliable, regular and relevant information and statistics on Australia’s health and welfare. It is an independent corporate Commonwealth entity governed by a management board, and accountable to the Australian Parliament through the Health portfolio. The AIHW aims to improve the health and wellbeing of Australians through authoritative health and welfare information and statistics. It collects and reports information on a wide range of topics and issues, ranging from health and welfare expenditure, hospitals, disease and injury, and mental health, to ageing, homelessness, disability and child protection. The Institute also plays a role in developing and maintaining national metadata standards. This work contributes to improving the quality and consistency of national health and welfare statistics. The Institute works closely with governments and non-government organisations to achieve greater adherence to these standards in administrative data collections to promote national consistency and comparability of data and reporting. One of the main functions of the AIHW is to work with the states and territories to improve the quality of administrative data and, where possible, to compile national datasets based on data from each jurisdiction, to analyse these datasets and disseminate information and statistics. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Act 1987, in conjunction with compliance to the Privacy Act 1988 (Commonwealth), ensures that the data collections managed by the AIHW are kept securely and under the strictest conditions with respect to privacy and confidentiality. For further information see the AIHW website. |
Timeliness: | This indicator reports the latest information available (for years 2012 to 2014). |
Accessibility: | The AIHW provide a variety of products that draw upon the NMD and NHMD including online data cubes and reports. These products may be accessed on the AIHW website: |
Interpretability: | NHMD The scope of the NHMD is episodes of care for admitted patients in essentially all hospitals in Australia, including public and private acute and psychiatric hospitals, free-standing day hospital facilities, alcohol and drug treatment hospitals and dental hospitals. Hospitals operated by the Australian Defence Force, corrections authorities and in Australia's off-shore territories are not included. The hospital separations data do not include episodes of non-admitted patient care provided in outpatient clinics or emergency departments. States and territories supplied these data to the AIHW under the terms of the National Health Information Agreement. The data quality statement for the AIHW NHMD can be found in /content/index.phtml/itemId/638202 with summary data quality information in Appendix A of Admitted patient care 2014–15: Australian hospital statistics (AIHW 2016). NMD The data quality statements for the AIHW NMD can be found in the following ABS publications: ABS Quality declaration summary for Causes of death, Australia (ABS 2017a) and ABS quality declaration summary for Deaths, Australia (ABS 2017b). For more information on the AIHW NMD, see Deaths data at AIHW. |
Relevance: | The data provide an estimate of the incidence of acute coronary events in Australia and in each jurisdiction, based on administrative data currently available. Non-fatal events are estimated from the NHMD and fatal events from the NMD. It is an estimate of ‘events’, not individuals. It should be noted that an individual may have multiple events in the one year or in different years. Each would be counted. Further, an individual may have one acute coronary event which resulted in multiple hospitalisations, due to transfers for treatment and on-going care. In the NHMD these are recorded as multiple unlinked hospital episodes. The method of estimation attempts to take account of transfers in the databases by excluding hospitalisations ending in a transfer to another acute hospital (so that each acute coronary syndrome (ACS) event is counted only once, regardless of the number of hospitalisation episodes per event) and by excluding hospitalisations for ACS ending in death in hospital (as these should be picked up in the NMD data). The method of estimation has been developed based on an analysis of hospital and deaths data validated using linked data from Western Australia and New South Wales (AIHW 2014). The year in which the event occurred is determined from the separation date for hospitalisations, and from the year of registration of death. Data are reported by the state or territory of usual residence of the person at the time of hospitalisation or death. Variability across jurisdictions (particularly in hospital transfer rates) indicates that the method of estimation may lead to an underestimation of incidence in some jurisdictions. This variation may be due to differences in treatment and referral patterns but could also be due to differences in data recording practices. Rates for Indigenous and other Australians are based on data from those jurisdictions where the quality of identification is considered reasonable in both the NHMD and the NMD. NMD data from 5 jurisdictions (New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory) have been assessed by the AIHW as having adequate Indigenous identification from 1998 onwards and only these 5 jurisdictions are included in the estimates reported by Indigenous status. Rates for other Australians are calculated by subtracting Indigenous estimates from total estimates for the five jurisdictions divided by the population of other Australians in those jurisdictions. Other Australians therefore includes non-Indigenous people and people whose Indigenous status was not stated or inadequately described. |
Accuracy: | Assessment of validity based on linked and unlinked data from Western Australia and New South Wales has shown that the method underestimates the incidence of acute coronary events in at least those states. Nonetheless, these estimates provide a reasonable measure of the incidence of acute coronary events and may be useful for recording and monitoring each jurisdiction’s progress over time. Comparison between jurisdictions should not be made as the assessment of validity suggested variations in the under-count of acute coronary event rates, as observed in Western Australia and New South Wales (6% in Western Australia and 11% in New South Wales in 2007). Factors such as differing treatment and referral patterns and data recording practices across states/territories are likely to have an impact on administrative records and affect jurisdictional comparability. The accuracy of the estimates will depend on the accuracy of coding in the NHMD and the NMD (see data sources for data quality statements for each data source). In particular the accuracy of coding of principal diagnosis, hospital transfers, deaths in hospital and underlying cause of death are central to the accuracy of the estimates. The accuracy of Indigenous estimates is also reliant on the appropriate identification of Indigenous people in the NHMD and the NMD. NMD data from 5 jurisdictions (New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory) have been assessed by the AIHW as having adequate Indigenous identification from 1998 onwards and only these 5 jurisdictions are included in the estimates reported by Indigenous status. Since 2012, recording of Indigenous status in private hospitals in the Northern Territory has improved, resulting in the incidence of heart attacks being captured for both Indigneous and other Australians. Prior to 2012, private hospitals in the Northern Territory did not record information on Indigenous status, and as such all non-fatal heart attack events treated in the private hospital in the Northern Territory were included in the incidence counts for other Australians. Data for 2010 have been adjusted for the additional deaths arising from outstanding registrations of deaths in Queensland in 2010. Deaths occurring between 1992 and 2006 but registered in 2010 by the Queensland Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages are excluded from the estimates for Indigenous and other Australians. For more details, refer to technical note 3 in Causes of death, Australia, 2010(ABS 2012). NMD data for 2012 and 2013 have been revised since the previous reporting cycle. In this reporting cycle, deaths registered in 2012 and earlier are based on the final version of cause of death data; deaths registered in 2013 and 2014 are based on revised and preliminary versions respectively and are subject to further revision by the ABS. |
Coherence: | This is the fifth year in which this indicator has been reported. This is the third year in which this indicator is reported for each jurisdiction. |
Source and reference attributes | |
Submitting organisation: | Australian Institute of Health and Welfare |
Reference documents: | ABS (Australian Bureau of Statistics) 2012. Causes of death Australia, 2010. ABS cat. no. 3303.0. Canberra: ABS. Viewed 20 June 2017,http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/[email protected]/Lookup/3303.0Main+ ABS 2017a. Causes of death Australia. ABS cat. no. 3303.0. Canberra: ABS. Viewed 20 June 2017, www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/[email protected]/mf/3303.0/ ABS 2017b. Deaths, Australia, 2015. ABS cat. no. 3302.0. Canberra: ABS. Viewed 20 June 2017, www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/[email protected]/mf/3302.0/ AIHW (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare) 2014. Acute coronary syndrome: validation of the method used to monitor incidence in Australia. Cat. no. CVD 68. Canberra: AIHW. Viewed on 20 June 2017, http://www.aihw.gov.au/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id= AIHW 2016. Admitted patient care 2014–15: Australian hospital statistics. Cat. no. HSE 172. Canberra: AIHW. Viewed 21 June 2017, http://www.aihw.gov.au/publication- |
Relational attributes | |
Related metadata references: | Supersedes National Healthcare Agreement: PI 09-Incidence of heart attacks (acute coronary events), 2016 QS Health!, Superseded 31/01/2017 Has been superseded by National Healthcare Agreement: PI 09-Incidence of heart attacks (acute coronary events), 2018 QS Health!, Standard 30/01/2018 |
Indicators linked to this Data Quality statement: |