Arellano M G, Petersen G R, Petitti D B, Smith R E
Am J Public Health. 1984 Dec;74(12):1324-30. doi: 10.2105/ajph.74.12.1324.
The California Automated Mortality Linkage System (CAMLIS), established in 1981 to facilitate the conduct of follow-up studies in the State of California, employs a combination of deterministic and probabilistic linkage decision criteria to perform the death clearance function. The system was evaluated against four traditional death clearance procedures and the performance of each procedure measured in terms of measures of sensitivity and specificity. Only one procedure was associated with a specificity lower than 0.99; for that one, the specificity was 0.93. There was much greater fluctuation in the observed sensitivity levels. In one of the procedures, CAMLIS demonstrated a sensitivity of 0.97 versus 0.79 for the Social Security Administration. A comparison against the National Death Index (NDI) produced sensitivities of 0.89 for CAMLIS and 0.94 for the NDI. An assessment of manual search procedures using a file of Japanese names produced a CAMLIS sensitivity measure of 0.92 compared with 0.93 for the manual search. Another manual search procedure using microfiche copies of the state death index produced a CAMLIS sensitivity of 0.97; in this evaluation, the sensitivity of the manual search was defined as 1.0. Another measure of performance of a death clearance procedure is its predictive value in identifying a person who has died; CAMLIS generated predictive values in these evaluations that ranged from 0.93 through 0.99, contrasted with the NDI value of 0.59.
加利福尼亚自动死亡率关联系统(CAMLIS)于1981年建立,旨在促进加利福尼亚州的随访研究,它采用确定性和概率性关联决策标准相结合的方式来执行死亡清查功能。该系统与四种传统死亡清查程序进行了评估,并根据敏感性和特异性指标衡量了每种程序的性能。只有一种程序的特异性低于0.99;对于该程序,特异性为0.93