VHA Corporate Data Warehouse height and weight data: opportunities and challenges for health services research.

Within the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), anthropometric measurements entered into the electronic medical record are stored in local information systems, the national Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW), and in some regional data warehouses. This article describes efforts to examine the quality of weight and height data within the CDW and to compare CDW data with data from warehouses maintained by several of VHA's regional groupings of healthcare facilities (Veterans Integrated Service Networks [VISNs]). We found significantly fewer recorded heights than weights in both the CDW and VISN data sources. In spite of occasional anomalies, the concordance in the number and value of records in the CDW and the VISN warehouses was generally 97% to 99% or greater. Implausible variation in same-day and same-year heights and weights was noted, suggesting measurement or data-entry errors. Our work suggests that the CDW, over time and through validation, has become a generally reliable source of anthropometric data. Researchers should assess the reliability of data contained within any source and apply strategies to minimize the impact of data errors appropriate to their study population.

[1]  R. Harrist,et al.  Analytic methods in Project HeartBeat! , 2009, American journal of preventive medicine.

[2]  J. Lyznicki,et al.  Obesity: assessment and management in primary care. , 2001, American family physician.

[3]  D. McAlpine,et al.  Trends in Obesity-Related Counseling in Primary Care: 1995–2004 , 2007, Medical care.

[4]  Leila C. Kahwati,et al.  Obesity Diagnosis and Care Practices in the Veterans Health Administration , 2010, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[5]  C. Summerbell,et al.  Obesity and disability – a short review , 2006, Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity.

[6]  D. Schoenfeld,et al.  National patterns of physician activities related to obesity management. , 2000, Archives of family medicine.

[7]  T. Goodell The Obese Trauma Patient: Treatment Strategies , 1996, Journal of trauma nursing : the official journal of the Society of Trauma Nurses.

[8]  R. Heller,et al.  Risk factor measurement quality in primary care routine data was variable but nondifferential between individuals. , 2008, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[9]  L. Epstein,et al.  Medical care for obese patients: advice for health care professionals. , 2002, American family physician.

[10]  Leila C. Kahwati,et al.  Design and Dissemination of the MOVE! Weight-Management Program for Veterans , 2009, Preventing chronic disease.

[11]  E. Hubbard,et al.  Initiative , 2020, Encyclopedia of Creativity, Invention, Innovation and Entrepreneurship.

[12]  J. R. Scotti,et al.  Available From , 1973 .

[13]  Sarah Krein,et al.  Advancing evidence-based care for diabetes: lessons from the Veterans Health Administration. , 2007, Health affairs.

[14]  L. Beck,et al.  Care of Morbidly Obese People With Spinal Cord Injury , 1996, Journal of trauma nursing : the official journal of the Society of Trauma Nurses.

[15]  D. Kerr,et al.  Anthropometric measurement error and the assessment of nutritional status , 1999, British Journal of Nutrition.

[16]  J. Sorkin,et al.  Longitudinal change in the heights of men and women: consequential effects on body mass index. , 1999, Epidemiologic reviews.

[17]  H. Nawaz,et al.  American College of Preventive Medicine Practice Policy statement. Weight management counseling of overweight adults. , 2001, American journal of preventive medicine.

[18]  P. Shekelle,et al.  Perceived Barriers to Weight Management in Primary Care—Perspectives of Patients and Providers , 2007, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[19]  K. Lohr,et al.  Screening and Interventions for Obesity in Adults: Summary of the Evidence for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force , 2003, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[20]  Treatment of Obesity in Adults Clinical Guidelines on the Identification, Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and Obesity in Adults--The Evidence Report. National Institutes of Health. , 1998, Obesity research.

[21]  Sandeep R. Das,et al.  Obesity prevalence among veterans at Veterans Affairs medical facilities. , 2005, American journal of preventive medicine.

[22]  Leonard H. Epstein,et al.  Overweight, obesity, and health risk. , 2000, Archives of internal medicine.