Gini R, Schuemie MJ, Francesconi P, Lapi F, Cricelli I, Pasqua A, Gallina P, Donato D, Brugaletta S, Donatini A, Marini A, Cricelli C, Damiani G, Bellentani M, van der Lei J, Sturkenboom MC, Klazinga NS
PLoS ONE. 2014;9(5):e95419, PMID: 24816637
Italy has a population of 60 million and a universal coverage single-payer healthcare system, which mandates collection of healthcare administrative data in a uniform fashion throughout the country. On the other hand, organization of the health system takes place at the regional level, and local initiatives generate natural experiments. This is happening in particular in primary care, due to the need to face the growing burden of chronic diseases. Health services research can compare and evaluate local initiatives on the basis of the common healthcare administrative data.However reliability of such data in this context needs to be assessed, especially when comparing different regions of the country. In this paper we investigated the validity of healthcare administrative databases to compute indicators of compliance with standards of care for diabetes, ischaemic heart disease (IHD) and heart failure (HF).
MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES