Abstract

BackgroundMedical certificates of cause of death (MCCOD) issued by hospital physicians are a key input to vital registration systems. Deaths certified by hospital physicians have been implicitly considered to be of high quality, but recent evidence suggests otherwise. We conducted a medical record review (MRR) of hospital MCCOD in the Philippines and compared the cause of death concordance with certificates coded by the Philippines Statistics Authority (PSA).MethodsMCCOD for adult deaths in Bohol Regional Hospital (BRH) in 2007–2008 and 2011 were collected and reviewed by a team of study physicians. Corresponding MCCOD coded by the PSA were linked by a hospital identifier. The study physicians wrote a new MCCOD using the patient medical record, noted the quality of the medical record to produce a cause of death, and indicated whether it was necessary to change the underlying cause of death (UCOD). Chance-corrected concordance, cause-specific mortality fraction (CSMF) accuracy, and chance-corrected CSMF were used to examine the concordance between the MRR and PSA.ResultsA total of 1052 adult deaths were linked between the MRR and PSA. Median chance-corrected concordance was 0.73, CSMF accuracy was 0.85, and chance-corrected CSMF accuracy was 0.58. 74.8% of medical records were deemed to be of high enough quality to assign a cause of death, yet study physicians indicated that it was necessary to change the UCOD in 41% of deaths, 82% of which required addition of a new UCOD.ConclusionsMedical records were generally of sufficient quality to assign a cause of death and concordance between the PSA and MRR was reasonably high, suggesting that routine mortality statistics data are reasonably accurate for describing population level causes of death in Bohol. While overall agreement between the PSA and MRR in major cause groups was sufficient for public health purposes, improvements in death certification practices are recommended to help physicians differentiate between treatable (immediate) COD and COD that are important for public health surveillance.

Highlights

  • Medical certificates of cause of death (MCCOD) issued by hospital physicians are a key input to vital registration systems

  • Study sample and outcome of the physician review A total of 1749 and 1241 deaths were collected from medical record review (MRR) and Philippines Statistics Authority (PSA), respectively, with most deaths occurring in adults

  • The fact that the concordance between the MRR and PSA was high despite a large proportion of the MCCOD requiring insertion of a new cause suggests that many of the causes inserted by the study physicians were in the same cause categories as the causes indicated by the PSA

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Summary

Introduction

Medical certificates of cause of death (MCCOD) issued by hospital physicians are a key input to vital registration systems. It is generally believed that hospital physicians have a comprehensive diagnostic understanding of their patients, and this will be reflected in high quality hospital cause of death (COD) statistics [3, 4]. A recent systematic review could identify only 29 studies that reported the accuracy of hospital data on COD published between 1980 and 2013 [5]. Other studies have identified poor death certification practices as a major issue [6]. Poor adherence to medical certification practices can lead to COD statistics of uncertain value for VR systems and public health interventions

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