Fuller Jill E, Walter Emmanuel B, Dole Nancy, O'Hara Richard, Herring Amy H, Durkin Maureen S, Specker Bonny, Wey Betty
School of Nursing, University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, Campus Box 7460, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-7460, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Duke University, DUMC 3675, Durham, NC, 27710, USA.
Matern Child Health J. 2017 Jan;21(1):29-35. doi: 10.1007/s10995-016-2090-1.
Objectives Sources of immunization data include state registries or immunization information systems (IIS), medical records, and surveys. Little is known about the quality of these data sources or the feasibility of using IIS data for research. We assessed the feasibility of collecting immunization information for a national children's health study by accessing existing IIS data and comparing the completeness of these data against medical record abstractions (MRA) and parent report. Staff time needed to obtain IIS and MRA data was assessed. Methods We administered a questionnaire to state-level IIS representatives to ascertain availability and completeness of their data for research and gather information about data formats. We evaluated quality of data from IIS, medical records, and reports from parents of 119 National Children's Study participants at three locations. Results IIS data were comparable to MRA data and both were more complete than parental report. Agreement between IIS and MRA data was greater than between parental report and MRA, suggesting IIS and MRA are better sources than parental report. Obtaining IIS data took less staff time than chart review, making IIS data linkage for research a preferred choice. Conclusions IIS survey results indicate data can be obtained by researchers using data linkages. IIS are an accessible and feasible child immunization information source and these registries reduce reliance on parental report or medical record abstraction. Researchers seeking to link IIS data with large multi-site studies should consider acquiring IIS data, but may need strategies to overcome barriers to data completeness and linkage.
目标 免疫数据的来源包括州登记处或免疫信息系统(IIS)、医疗记录和调查。对于这些数据来源的质量或使用IIS数据进行研究的可行性,人们了解甚少。我们通过访问现有的IIS数据,并将这些数据的完整性与医疗记录摘要(MRA)和家长报告进行比较,评估了为一项全国儿童健康研究收集免疫信息的可行性。评估了获取IIS和MRA数据所需的工作人员时间。方法 我们向州级IIS代表发放了一份问卷,以确定其研究数据的可用性和完整性,并收集有关数据格式的信息。我们评估了来自三个地点的119名全国儿童研究参与者的IIS数据、医疗记录和家长报告的数据质量。结果 IIS数据与MRA数据相当,且两者都比家长报告更完整。IIS与MRA数据之间的一致性大于家长报告与MRA之间的一致性,这表明IIS和MRA比家长报告是更好的数据来源。获取IIS数据比查阅病历花费的工作人员时间更少,这使得将IIS数据用于研究成为一个首选。结论 IIS调查结果表明研究人员可以通过数据链接获取数据。IIS是一种可获取且可行的儿童免疫信息来源,这些登记处减少了对家长报告或医疗记录摘要的依赖。寻求将IIS数据与大型多地点研究相链接的研究人员应考虑获取IIS数据,但可能需要采取策略来克服数据完整性和链接方面的障碍。