Systematic review of discharge coding accuracy.

INTRODUCTION Routinely collected data sets are increasingly used for research, financial reimbursement and health service planning. High quality data are necessary for reliable analysis. This study aims to assess the published accuracy of routinely collected data sets in Great Britain. METHODS Systematic searches of the EMBASE, PUBMED, OVID and Cochrane databases were performed from 1989 to present using defined search terms. Included studies were those that compared routinely collected data sets with case or operative note review and those that compared routinely collected data with clinical registries. RESULTS Thirty-two studies were included. Twenty-five studies compared routinely collected data with case or operation notes. Seven studies compared routinely collected data with clinical registries. The overall median accuracy (routinely collected data sets versus case notes) was 83.2% (IQR: 67.3-92.1%). The median diagnostic accuracy was 80.3% (IQR: 63.3-94.1%) with a median procedure accuracy of 84.2% (IQR: 68.7-88.7%). There was considerable variation in accuracy rates between studies (50.5-97.8%). Since the 2002 introduction of Payment by Results, accuracy has improved in some respects, for example primary diagnoses accuracy has improved from 73.8% (IQR: 59.3-92.1%) to 96.0% (IQR: 89.3-96.3), P= 0.020. CONCLUSION Accuracy rates are improving. Current levels of reported accuracy suggest that routinely collected data are sufficiently robust to support their use for research and managerial decision-making.

[1]  M. Goldacre,et al.  Reliability of routine hospital data on poisoning as measures of deliberate self poisoning in adolescents. , 1990, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[2]  I. Leck,et al.  The completeness and accuracy of health authority and cancer registry records according to a study of ovarian neoplasms. , 1991, Public health.

[3]  J. Barton,et al.  An Analysis of Cases Incorrectly Coded as Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Scottish Hospital In-Patient Statistics (Ships) , 1991, Scottish medical journal.

[4]  PIS and DRGs: coding inaccuracies and their consequences for resource management. , 1991, Journal of public health medicine.

[5]  N. Waugh,et al.  Audit of the quality of hospital discharge data. , 1992, Health bulletin.

[6]  How accurate are SMR1 (Scottish Morbidity Record 1) data? , 1992, Health bulletin.

[7]  G. Mcgonigal,et al.  Accuracy and completeness of Scottish mental hospital in-patient data. , 1992, Health bulletin.

[8]  Knill-Jones Rp,et al.  How accurate are SMR1 (Scottish Morbidity Record 1) data , 1992 .

[9]  Who should log SHIPS? The accuracy of Scottish Hospital Morbidity Data for Wilson's disease. , 1992, Health bulletin.

[10]  Coding of clinical diagnoses. Persevere with Körner system. , 1993, BMJ.

[11]  C Yeoh,et al.  Clinical coding: completeness and accuracy when doctors take it on. , 1993, BMJ.

[12]  A. Samy,et al.  Abdominal aortic aneurysm in Scotland , 1994, The British journal of surgery.

[13]  B. Devlin,et al.  Comparative hospital databases: value for management and quality. , 1994, Quality in health care : QHC.

[14]  M M McGilchrist,et al.  An audit of the accuracy of upper gastrointestinal diagnoses in Scottish Morbidity Record 1 data in Tayside. , 1995, Health bulletin.

[15]  R. Meara,et al.  The quality of diagnostic coding in cerebrovascular disease. , 1995, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[16]  K Harley,et al.  Quality of Scottish Morbidity Record (SMR) data. , 1996, Health bulletin.

[17]  C. Warlow,et al.  The accuracy of Scottish Morbidity Record (SMR1) data for identifying hospitalised stroke patients. , 1996, Health bulletin.

[18]  Ian K Crombie,et al.  The pocket guide to critical appraisal. , 1996 .

[19]  M. Petticrew,et al.  Assessment of the reproducibility of clinical coding in routinely collected hospital activity data: a study in two hospitals. , 1998, Journal of public health medicine.

[20]  S. Bridgman,et al.  A novel method for the assessment of the accuracy of diagnostic codes in general surgery. , 1998, Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

[21]  R. Holdsworth,et al.  Accuracy of the recording of operative events by the Scottish Morbidity Record 1 (SMR1) for a teaching hospital vascular unit. , 1999, Journal of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.

[22]  J. Laing,et al.  Coding plastic surgery operations: an audit of performance using OPCS-4. , 2000, British journal of plastic surgery.

[23]  A. Walker,et al.  A systematic review of discharge coding accuracy. , 2001, Journal of public health medicine.

[24]  Alex Bottle,et al.  Hospital episode statistics: time for clinicians to get involved? , 2002, Clinical medicine.

[25]  J Raftery,et al.  Potential use of routine databases in health technology assessment. , 2005, Health technology assessment.

[26]  E De Nigris,et al.  A systematic review and economic evaluation of alendronate, etidronate, risedronate, raloxifene and teriparatide for the prevention and treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis. , 2005, Health technology assessment.

[27]  N. Manning,et al.  Comparison of hospital episode statistics and central cardiac audit database in public reporting of congenital heart surgery mortality , 2007, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[28]  P. Aylin,et al.  Descriptive study comparing routine hospital administrative data with the Vascular Society of Great Britain and Ireland's National Vascular Database. , 2007, European journal of vascular and endovascular surgery : the official journal of the European Society for Vascular Surgery.

[29]  The accuracy of clinical data: a comparison between central and local data collection. , 2007, The surgeon : journal of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons of Edinburgh and Ireland.

[30]  David Moher,et al.  Development of AMSTAR: a measurement tool to assess the methodological quality of systematic reviews , 2007, BMC medical research methodology.

[31]  P. Aylin,et al.  Comparison of administrative data with the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland (ACPGBI) colorectal cancer database , 2008, International Journal of Colorectal Disease.

[32]  A. Bottle,et al.  Laparoscopic and conventional appendicectomy in children: outcomes in English hospitals between 1996 and 2006 , 2008, Pediatric surgery international (Print).

[33]  Changing trends in surgery for acute appendicitis (Br J Surg 2008; 95: 363–368) , 2008, The British journal of surgery.

[34]  A. Bottle,et al.  Descriptive study of selected healthcare-associated infections using national Hospital Episode Statistics data 1996-2006 and comparison with mandatory reporting systems. , 2008, The Journal of hospital infection.

[35]  Peter Short,et al.  Connecting for health. , 2008, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[36]  C. Butler,et al.  A multidisciplinary audit of clinical coding accuracy in otolaryngology: financial, managerial and clinical governance considerations under payment‐by‐results , 2009, Clinical otolaryngology : official journal of ENT-UK ; official journal of Netherlands Society for Oto-Rhino-Laryngology & Cervico-Facial Surgery.

[37]  Accuracy of clinical coding in ENT day surgery , 2009, Clinical otolaryngology : official journal of ENT-UK ; official journal of Netherlands Society for Oto-Rhino-Laryngology & Cervico-Facial Surgery.

[38]  J. Homer,et al.  Audit of clinical coding of major head and neck operations. , 2009, Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

[39]  A. Mendelow,et al.  The accuracy of hospital discharge coding for hemorrhagic stroke. , 2009, Acta neurologica Belgica.

[40]  A. Bottle,et al.  Application of AHRQ patient safety indicators to English hospital data , 2009, Quality & Safety in Health Care.

[41]  R. Nouraei,et al.  PAYMENT BY RESULTS: FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS OF CLINICAL CODING ERRORS IN UROLOGY , 2009, BJU international.

[42]  A. Darzi,et al.  The volume-mortality relation for radical cystectomy in England: retrospective analysis of hospital episode statistics , 2010, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[43]  A. Darzi,et al.  Impact of Hospital Institutional Volume on Postoperative Mortality After Major Emergency Colorectal Surgery in English National Health Service Trusts, 2001 to 2005 , 2010, Diseases of the colon and rectum.

[44]  M. Chávez-MacGregor,et al.  Cancer survival in Australia, Canada, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and the UK, 1995-2007 (the International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership): An analysis of population-based cancer registry data , 2011 .

[45]  E. Burns,et al.  Hospital stay amongst patients undergoing major elective colorectal surgery: predicting prolonged stay and readmissions in NHS hospitals , 2011, Colorectal disease : the official journal of the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland.

[46]  Robert A. Israel,et al.  International Classification of Diseases (ICD) , 2005 .