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DOI: 10.1177/106286060401900504
OpenAccess: Closed
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Identifying Hypertension-Related Comorbidities From Administrative Data: What's the Optimal Approach?

Ann M. Borzecki,Ashley T. Wong,Elaine C. Hickey,Arlene S. Ash,Dan R. Berlowitz

Medicine
Medical diagnosis
Gold standard (test)
2004
The objective was to determine the best strategy for identifying outpatients with hypertension-related diagnoses using Veterans Affairs (VA) administrative databases. We reviewed 1176 outpatient charts from 10 VA sites in 1999, taking the presence of 11 diagnoses relevant to hypertension management as the "gold standard" for identifying the comorbidity. We calculated agreement, sensitivity, and specificity for the chart versus several administrative data-based algorithms. Using 1999 data and requiring 1 administrative diagnosis, observed agreement ranged from 0.98 (atrial fibrillation) to 0.85 (hyperlipidemia), and kappas were generally high. Sensitivity varied from 38% (tobacco use) to 97% (diabetes); specificity exceeded 91% for 10 of 11 diagnoses. Requiring 2 years of data and 2 diagnoses improved most measures, with minimal sensitivity decrease. Agreement between the database and charts was good. Administrative data varied in its ability to identify all patients with a given diagnosis but identified accurately those without. The best strategy for case-finding required 2 diagnoses in a 2-year period.
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    Identifying Hypertension-Related Comorbidities From Administrative Data: What's the Optimal Approach?” is a paper by Ann M. Borzecki Ashley T. Wong Elaine C. Hickey Arlene S. Ash Dan R. Berlowitz published in 2004. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.