Accuracy of the death certificate in a population-based study of asthmatic patients
L. W. Hunt Jr, M. D. Silverstein, C. E. Reed, E. J. O'Connell, W. M. O'Fallon and J. W. Yunginger
Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic and Foundation, Rochester, Minn. 55905.
OBJECTIVE--To quantify the reliability of death certificate data concerning
asthma. DESIGN--The complete medical records of decedents were reviewed by
a physician certified in allergy and pulmonology who determined the cause
of death without having access to the original death certificate.
Disagreements between the death certificate and the reviewer were
adjudicated by an expert panel. SETTING--The community of Rochester, Minn.
PATIENTS--The mortality cohort included 339 deaths from a larger cohort of
5241 Rochester residents who received medical treatment for asthma between
1964 and 1983. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Kappa coefficients were used to
measure agreement beyond that expected by chance between the reviewer and
the death certificate. The sensitivity and specificity of the death
certificate diagnosis of asthma were calculated against the standard of the
reviewer/panel diagnosis. RESULTS--Death certificates reported asthma as an
immediate or underlying cause of death in 22 instances (6%), whereas the
reviewer/panel identified asthma in 53 cases (16%). In four cases, the
death certificate listed asthma and the panel identified another cause of
death. The death certificate had a sensitivity of 42% and a specificity of
99% compared with the reviewer/panel. Agreement between death certificates
and the reviewer was not influenced by whether an autopsy was performed.
CONCLUSIONS--Death certificate diagnosis of asthma as an underlying cause
of death had a low sensitivity but a high specificity. Increases in
mortality due to asthma are not likely caused by false-positive diagnoses
of asthma as an underlying cause of death. Asthma mortality rates,
determined from death certificate data, may indeed underestimate actual
asthma-related mortality.
Usefulness of Tobacco Check Boxes on Death Certificates: Texas, 1987-1998
Zevallos et al.
Am. J. Public Health 2004;94:1610-1613.
ABSTRACT
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Hansell et al.
Eur Respir J 2003;22:809-814.
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Mannino et al.
Thorax 2003;58:388-393.
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Vandentorren et al.
Eur Respir J 2003;21:462-467.
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Sunyer et al.
Thorax 2002;57:687-693.
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Sunyer
Eur Respir J 2001;17:1024-1033.
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SUNYER et al.
Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 1998;158:851-856.
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Pediatric Death Certification
Bowen and Marshall
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 1998;152:852-854.
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Long-Term Survival of a Cohort of Community Residents with Asthma
Silverstein et al.
NEJM 1994;331:1537-1541.
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Patterns of Asthma Mortality in Philadelphia from 1969 to 1991
Lang and Polansky
NEJM 1994;331:1542-1546.
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FATAL ASTHMA MAY BE UNDERREPORTED, NOT OVERREPORTED
JWatch General 1993;1993:5-5.
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