Centre for HIV and STIs, National Institute for Communicable Diseases, National Health Laboratory Service, 1 Modderfontein Road, Sandringham, Johannesburg, 2131, South Africa.
Paediatric HIV Diagnostics Division, Wits Health Consortium, Johannesburg, South Africa.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Jun 29;22(1):1266. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13508-y.
South Africa's National Health Laboratory Service (NHLS), the only clinical laboratory service in the country's public health sector, is an important resource for monitoring public health programmes.
We describe NHLS data quality, particularly patient demographics among infants, and the effect this has on linking multiple test results to a single patient.
Retrospective descriptive analysis of NHLS data from 1 January 2017-1 September 2020 was performed. A validated probabilistic record-linking algorithm linked multiple results to individual patients in lieu of a unique patient identifier. Paediatric HIV PCR data was used to illustrate the effect on monitoring and evaluating a public health programme. Descriptive statistics including medians, proportions and inter quartile ranges are reported, with Chi-square univariate tests for independence used to determine association between variables.
During the period analysed, 485 300 007 tests, 98 217 642 encounters and 35 771 846 patients met criteria for analysis. Overall, 15.80% (n = 15 515 380) of all encounters had a registered national identity (ID) number, 2.11% (n = 2 069 785) were registered without a given name, 63.15% (n = 62 020 107) were registered to women and 32.89% (n = 32 304 329) of all folder numbers were listed as either the patient's date of birth or unknown. For infants tested at < 7 days of age (n = 2 565 329), 0.099% (n = 2 534) had an associated ID number and 48.87% (n = 1 253 620) were registered without a given name. Encounters with a given name were linked to a subsequent encounter 40.78% (n = 14 180 409 of 34 775 617) of the time, significantly more often than the 21.85% (n = 217 660 of 996 229) of encounters registered with a baby-derivative name (p-value < 0.001).
Unavailability and poor capturing of patient demographics, especially among infants and children, affects the ability to accurately monitor routine health programmes. A unique national patient identifier, other than the national ID number, is urgently required and must be available at birth if South Africa is to accurately monitor programmes such as the Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV.
南非国家卫生实验室服务(NHLS)是该国公共卫生部门唯一的临床实验室服务,是监测公共卫生计划的重要资源。
我们描述 NHLS 的数据质量,特别是婴儿的患者人口统计学信息,并说明这对将多个检测结果与单个患者相关联的影响。
对 2017 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 9 月 1 日期间的 NHLS 数据进行回顾性描述性分析。经过验证的概率记录链接算法将多个结果链接到单个患者,而不是使用唯一的患者标识符。使用儿科 HIV PCR 数据来说明其对监测和评估公共卫生计划的影响。报告了描述性统计数据,包括中位数、比例和四分位数范围,并使用卡方独立性检验来确定变量之间的关联。
在所分析的期间内,有 485 300 007 次检测、98 217 642 次就诊和 35 771 846 名患者符合分析标准。总体而言,所有就诊中有 15.80%(n=15 515 380)有登记的国家身份证号码,2.11%(n=2 069 785)没有登记姓名,63.15%(n=62 020 107)登记为女性,32.89%(n=32 304 329)的所有文件夹号码都列为患者的出生日期或未知。对于在<7 天龄时接受检测的婴儿(n=2 565 329),有 0.099%(n=2 534)有相关的 ID 号码,48.87%(n=1 253 620)没有登记姓名。有名字的就诊与后续就诊相关联的比例为 40.78%(n=14 180 409 次就诊/34 775 617 次就诊),明显高于以婴儿衍生名称登记的就诊的 21.85%(n=217 660 次就诊/996 229 次就诊)(p 值<0.001)。
患者人口统计学信息,特别是婴儿和儿童的信息无法获取或获取情况不佳,影响了准确监测常规卫生计划的能力。迫切需要一个独特的国家患者标识符,而不是国家身份证号码,而且如果南非要准确监测预防母婴传播艾滋病毒等计划,则必须在出生时提供该标识符。