Communicable Disease Control Directorate, Public Health Division, Health Department of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2013 Apr 29;13:404. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-404.
National notification data for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and blood borne viruses (BBVs) continue to have a high proportion of missing data on Indigenous status, potentially biasing estimates of notification rates by Aboriginality. We evaluated the use of data linkage to improve the accuracy of estimated notification rates for STIs and BBVs in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal groups in Western Australia.
STI and BBV case notifications in Western Australia received in 2010 were linked with administrative health data collections in Western Australia to obtain additional data on Indigenous status. STI and BBV notification rates based on the pre- and post-linkage data among Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal groups were compared.
Data linkage decreased the proportion of notifications with unknown Indigenous status by 74% from 10.2% to 2.7%. There was no significant difference in disease-specific age-adjusted notification rate ratio estimates based on pre-linkage data and post-linkage data for Aboriginal people compared with non-Aboriginal people.
Our findings suggest that reported STI and BBV disease-specific age-adjusted notification rates for 2010 in Western Australia are unlikely to be significantly biased by excluding notifications with unknown Indigenous status. This finding is likely to be dependent on recent improvements in the reporting of Indigenous status in notification data in Western Australia. Cost-effective and systematic solutions, including the better use of existing data linkage resources, are required to facilitate continued improvement in the completeness of reporting and accuracy of estimates for notifiable STIs and BBVs in Australia by Aboriginality.
性传播感染(STIs)和血源性病原体(BBVs)的国家通报数据继续存在大量缺失土著身份数据的情况,这可能会对按土著身份估计的通报率产生偏差。我们评估了数据链接的使用,以提高西澳大利亚州土著和非土著群体中 STIs 和 BBVs 估计通报率的准确性。
2010 年在西澳大利亚州收到的 STI 和 BBV 病例通报与西澳大利亚州的行政健康数据收集进行了链接,以获得有关土著身份的其他数据。比较了土著和非土著群体中基于预链接和后链接数据的 STI 和 BBV 通报率。
数据链接将具有未知土著身份的通报比例从 10.2%降低到 2.7%,降低了 74%。与非土著人相比,基于预链接数据和后链接数据,土著人特定疾病的年龄调整后通报率比估计值没有显著差异。
我们的研究结果表明,2010 年在西澳大利亚州报告的特定疾病的年龄调整后 STI 和 BBV 通报率不太可能因排除具有未知土著身份的通报而受到重大偏差。这一发现可能取决于西澳大利亚州通报数据中土著身份报告的近期改进。需要具有成本效益和系统性的解决方案,包括更好地利用现有的数据链接资源,以促进澳大利亚按土著身份继续提高可通报的 STIs 和 BBVs 的报告完整性和估计准确性。