Use of Administrative Data for the Surveillance of Mood and Anxiety Disorders

Author:

Kisely Stephen1,Lin Elizabeth2,Gilbert Charles3,Smith Mark4,Campbell Leslie-Anne5,Vasiliadis Helen-Maria6

Affiliation:

1. University of Queensland, Room 518 (A), McGregor Building (No 64), St Lucia, Brisbane Qld 4072, Australia. Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Professor, Departments of Psychiatry, Community Health and Epidemiology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

2. Health Systems Research and Consulting Unit, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Surveillance Division, Centre for Chronic Disease Prevention and Control, Public Health Agency of Canada, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

4. Repository, Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, University of Manitoba, Manitoba, Canada

5. Health Outcomes Research Unit, Capital District Health Authority, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

6. Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada

Abstract

Objective: There is increasing interest in the use of administrative data for surveillance and research in Australia. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the usefulness of such data for the surveillance of mood and anxiety disorder using databases from the following Canadian provinces: British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia. Method: A population-based record-linkage analysis was done using data from physician billings and hospital discharge abstracts, and community-based clinics using a case definition of ICD-9 diagnoses of 296.0–296.9, 311.0, and 300.0–300.9. Results: The prevalence of treated mood and/or anxiety disorder was similar in Nova Scotia, British Columbia, and Ontario at approximately 10%. The prevalence for Quebec was slightly lower at 8%. Findings from the provinces showed consistency across age and sex despite variations in data coding. Women tended to show a higher prevalence overall of mood and anxiety disorder than men. There was considerably more variation, however, when treated anxiety (300.0–300.9) and mood disorders (296.0–296.9, 311.0) were considered separately. Prevalence increased steadily to middle age, declining in the 50s and 60s, and then increased after 70 years of age. Conclusions: Administrative data can provide a useful, reliable and economical source of information for the surveillance of treated mood and/or anxiety disorder. Due to the lack of specificity, however, in the diagnoses and data capture, it may be difficult to conduct surveillance of mood and anxiety disorders as separate entities. These findings may have implications for the surveillance of mood and anxiety disorders in Australia with the development of a national network for the extraction, linkage and analysis of administrative data.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Medicine

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