Abstract:Background: Data of quality are needed to identify ethnic disparities in health and healthcare and to meet the challenges in governance of race relations. Yet concerns over completeness, accuracy and timeliness have been long-standing and inhibitive with respect to the analytical use of the data. Aims: To identify incompleteness of ethnicity data across routine health and healthcare datasets and to investigate the utility of analytical strategies for using data that is of suboptimal quality. Methods: An analys… Show more
Financial penalties for readmission are expected to incentivise more effective care of the original problem, thereby avoiding readmission. Our findings, that half of children come back with different problems, do not support this presumption.
Financial penalties for readmission are expected to incentivise more effective care of the original problem, thereby avoiding readmission. Our findings, that half of children come back with different problems, do not support this presumption.
“…First, a large proportion of patients were not assigned to an ethnic group, which reflects the reality of ethnic group coding in the NHS (and in most of Europe) 12 23. There is no reliable way to assess selection biases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Separate codes (Z1–Z4) are used if patients are unable or unwilling to state their ethnicity. Recording ethnicity within the NHS is difficult and incomplete,12 and for obvious reasons, is particularly difficult during an emergency. Patients were categorised into one of two major ethnic groups—white (including white British, white Irish, and white from any other background) and South Asian (including Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi).…”
The quality of care provided was comparable between white and South Asian populations. The data support the emerging view that South Asians' high mortality from coronary heart disease reflects higher incidence rather than higher case fatality. South Asians had an OOHCA at a significantly younger age. The study demonstrates the importance of ethnic coding within the emergency services.
“…The objectives of the Catalan Immigration Master Plan for Health include the development of better data collection systems on migrant health and health service utilization. The National Health Service in England has long required collection of data on ethnicity in activity data, but the quality of recording is variable [32].…”
Section: Targeting Patients or Providersmentioning
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.