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2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11486676

ABSTRACT

Mortality statistics are an important source of information concerning variations in time and place, identification of risk factors and the evaluation of treatment programs. In this study, a new death certificate was completed "blind" on the basis of hospital records from the last episode of care, across a random sample of 1,376 cases. The results showed that the overlap between the official register's underlying cause of death and that of a panel was 72 per cent at the three-digit level. The official underlying cause of death from cerebrovascular diseases (CVD) was 72 cases in this sample, while 93 were deemed to have CVD by a panel. Additionally, of the 1,233 cases originally reported as non-CVD, the panel deemed non-CVD to be the true underlying cause in 1,176 cases. The paper concludes that CVD was most often correctly reported as the underlying cause of death in the investigated ages up to 75 years but plain differences were found between specialities and in different hospital size.


Subject(s)
Hospital Mortality , Hospitals/standards , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Stroke/mortality , Abstracting and Indexing/standards , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Cause of Death , Data Collection , Death Certificates , Hospitals/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Middle Aged , Registries , Sweden/epidemiology
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10351019

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In Sweden, hospital stays, deaths, and censuses have long been stored on electronic media. AIMS: To apply post-hospital survival measures to hospitals having different degrees of specialization by linking existing data in census and in-patient registers. METHOD: In-patient records totaling 3.6 million were collected. They were linked to the 1985 and 1990 censuses regarding patients' background data, and the cause of death registers. Observed three-month mortalities in 27 diagnoses were contrasted against the expected. RESULTS: The three-month survival was lower than expected in some large, and, more often, in small hospitals [corrected].


Subject(s)
Cause of Death , Hospitalization , Medical Record Linkage , Registries , Survivors , Censuses , Disease/classification , Humans , Medical Audit , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Quality of Health Care , Sweden
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