Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, 408-727 McDermot Ave, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3E 3P5.
ICES, 2075 Bayview Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4N 3M5.
Int J Popul Data Sci. 2021 May 25;6(1):1412. doi: 10.23889/ijpds.v6i1.1412.
Canadian health data repositories link datasets at the provincial level, based on their residents' registrations to provincial health insurance plans. Linking national datasets with provincial health care registries poses several challenges that may result in misclassification and impact the estimation of linkage rates. A recent linkage of a federal immigration database in the province of Manitoba illustrates these challenges.
a) To describe the linkage of the federal Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada Permanent Resident (IRCC-PR) database with the Manitoba healthcare registry and b) compare data linkage methods and rates between four Canadian provinces accounting for interprovincial mobility of immigrants.
We compared linkage rates by immigrant's province of intended destination (province vs. rest of Canada). We used external nationwide immigrant tax filing records to approximate actual settlement and obtain linkage rates corrected for interprovincial mobility.
The immigrant linkage rates in Manitoba before and after accounting for interprovincial mobility were 84.8% and 96.1, respectively. Linkage rates did not substantially differ according to immigrants' characteristics, with a few exceptions. Observed linkage rates across the four provinces ranged from 74.0% to 86.7%. After correction for interprovincial mobility, the estimated linkage rates increased > 10 percentage points for the provinces that stratified by intended destination (British Columbia and Manitoba) and decreased up to 18 percentage points for provinces that could not use immigration records of those who did not intend to settle in the province (New Brunswick and Ontario).
Despite variations in methodology, provincial linkage rates were relatively high. The use of a national immigration dataset for linkage to provincial repositories allows a more comprehensive linkage than that of province-specific subsets. Observed linkage rates can be biased downwards by interprovincial migration, and methods that use external data sources can contribute to assessing potential selection bias and misclassification.
加拿大的健康数据存储库基于居民在省级医疗保险计划中的注册情况,将省级数据集链接在一起。将国家数据集与省级医疗保健登记册进行链接存在一些挑战,这些挑战可能导致分类错误,并影响链接率的估计。最近在马尼托巴省对联邦移民数据库的链接就说明了这些挑战。
a)描述联邦移民、难民和公民部(IRCC-PR)数据库与马尼托巴省医疗保健登记册的链接,b)比较四个加拿大省份的数据链接方法和链接率,以考虑移民的省际流动性。
我们通过移民的预期目的地省份(省份与加拿大其他地区)比较了链接率。我们使用全国性的移民纳税记录来近似实际定居情况,并获得了校正省际流动的链接率。
在考虑省际流动性之前和之后,马尼托巴省的移民链接率分别为 84.8%和 96.1%。除了少数例外,移民特征与链接率没有显著差异。四个省份的观察到的链接率范围为 74.0%至 86.7%。校正省际流动性后,按预期目的地分层的省份(不列颠哥伦比亚省和马尼托巴省)的估计链接率增加了超过 10 个百分点,而那些无法使用那些不打算在该省定居的移民记录的省份(新不伦瑞克省和安大略省)的链接率下降了多达 18 个百分点。
尽管方法存在差异,但省级链接率相对较高。使用国家移民数据集进行与省级存储库的链接可以比使用特定于省的子集进行更全面的链接。省际迁移可能会导致观察到的链接率出现偏差,并且使用外部数据源的方法可以有助于评估潜在的选择偏差和分类错误。