2021
DOI: 10.1136/injuryprev-2020-044098
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Three Es of linked injury data: Episodes, Encounters and Events

Abstract: BackgroundTreatment and recovery times following injury can be lengthy, comprising multiple interactions with the hospital system for initial acute care, subsequent rehabilitation and possible re-presentation due to complications.AimsThis article aims to promote the use of consistent terminology in injury data linkage studies, suggest important factors to consider when managing linked injury data, and encourage thorough documentation and a robust discourse around different approaches to data management to ensu… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…All acute care hospitalization episodes for each patient were grouped into encounters to reproducibly organize the linked dataset. 18 Episodes are largely analogous to episodes in the UK system, and encounters (groups of episodes) are analogous to spells in the UK when they occur in a single facility; however, for our study we use encounters more broadly to include all facilities which the patient moved through in the single healthcare experience, i.e. initial referring hospital and definitive care hospital are included in the one encounter if the patient experienced the care in a continuous block.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All acute care hospitalization episodes for each patient were grouped into encounters to reproducibly organize the linked dataset. 18 Episodes are largely analogous to episodes in the UK system, and encounters (groups of episodes) are analogous to spells in the UK when they occur in a single facility; however, for our study we use encounters more broadly to include all facilities which the patient moved through in the single healthcare experience, i.e. initial referring hospital and definitive care hospital are included in the one encounter if the patient experienced the care in a continuous block.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This protocol uses the terminology described in Vallmuur and colleagues’ paper, 33 a study which aimed to promote the use of consistent terminology in injury data linkage studies to describe episodes, encounters and events, which in summary states:…”
Section: Methods and Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is possible for an individual to have multiple related or unrelated hospital admissions over the study period, so data sequencing logic is needed to distinguish records as (1) part of the same hospitalization (eg, a transfer); (2) a readmission or follow-up care related to the original index injury; (3) a new injury; or (4) a hospital admission for a reason other than injury. The study will apply data sequencing principles, logic, and definitions developed by Vallmuur et al [ 18 ], who use coded diagnoses, external causes, admission and discharge dates, transfer, and care type codes to distinguish between these records.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%