Assessing the quality of clinical and administrative data extracted from hospitals: the General Medicine Inpatient Initiative (GEMINI) experience

Author:

Verma Amol A123ORCID,Pasricha Sachin V14,Jung Hae Young1,Kushnir Vladyslav1,Mak Denise Y F1,Koppula Radha1,Guo Yishan1,Kwan Janice L25,Lapointe-Shaw Lauren267,Rawal Shail26,Tang Terence28,Weinerman Adina29,Razak Fahad123

Affiliation:

1. Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

2. Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Institute for Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

4. School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

5. Department of Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

6. Division of General Internal Medicine, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

7. Institute for Clinical and Evaluative Sciences, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

8. Institute for Better Health, Trillium Health Partners, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

9. Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Objective Large clinical databases are increasingly used for research and quality improvement. We describe an approach to data quality assessment from the General Medicine Inpatient Initiative (GEMINI), which collects and standardizes administrative and clinical data from hospitals. Methods The GEMINI database contained 245 559 patient admissions at 7 hospitals in Ontario, Canada from 2010 to 2017. We performed 7 computational data quality checks and iteratively re-extracted data from hospitals to correct problems. Thereafter, GEMINI data were compared to data that were manually abstracted from the hospital’s electronic medical record for 23 419 selected data points on a sample of 7488 patients. Results Computational checks flagged 103 potential data quality issues, which were either corrected or documented to inform future analysis. For example, we identified the inclusion of canceled radiology tests, a time shift of transfusion data, and mistakenly processing the chemical symbol for sodium (“Na”) as a missing value. Manual validation identified 1 important data quality issue that was not detected by computational checks: transfusion dates and times at 1 site were unreliable. Apart from that single issue, across all data tables, GEMINI data had high overall accuracy (ranging from 98%–100%), sensitivity (95%–100%), specificity (99%–100%), positive predictive value (93%–100%), and negative predictive value (99%–100%) compared to the gold standard. Discussion and Conclusion Computational data quality checks with iterative re-extraction facilitated reliable data collection from hospitals but missed 1 critical quality issue. Combining computational and manual approaches may be optimal for assessing the quality of large multisite clinical databases.

Funder

Green Shield Canada Foundation

University of Toronto Division of General Internal Medicine

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Informatics

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