Comparison of routine blood alcohol tests and ICD-10-AM coding of alcohol involvement for major trauma patients

Author:

Lau Georgina1ORCID,Gabbe Belinda J12,Mitra Biswadev134ORCID,Dietze Paul M56,Braaf Sandra1,Beck Ben17

Affiliation:

1. Monash University, Australia

2. Swansea University, UK

3. Emergency and Trauma Centre, The Alfred Hospital, Australia

4. National Trauma Research Institute, The Alfred Hospital, Australia

5. Burnet Institute, Australia

6. Curtin University, Australia

7. Laval University, Canada

Abstract

Background: Alcohol use is a key preventable risk factor for serious injury. To effectively prevent alcohol-related injuries, we rely on the accurate surveillance of alcohol involvement in injury events. This often involves the use of administrative data, such as International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision, Australian Modification (ICD-10-AM) coding. Objective: To evaluate the completeness and accuracy of using administrative coding for the surveillance of alcohol involvement in major trauma injury events by comparing patient blood alcohol concentration (BAC) with ICD-10-AM coding. Method: This retrospective cohort study examined 2918 injury patients aged ≥18 years who presented to a major trauma centre in Victoria, Australia, over a 2-year period, of which 78% ( n = 2286) had BAC data available. Results: While 15% of patients had a non-zero BAC, only 4% had an ICD-10-AM code suggesting acute alcohol involvement. The agreement between blood alcohol test results and ICD-10-AM coding of acute alcohol involvement was fair ( κ = 0.33, 95% confidence interval: 0.27–0.38). Of the 341 patients with a non-zero BAC, 82 (24.0%) had ICD-10-AM codes related to acute alcohol involvement. Supplementary factors Y90 Evidence of alcohol involvement determined by blood alcohol level codes, which specifically describe patient BAC, were assigned to just 29% of eligible patients with a non-zero BAC. Conclusion: ICD-10-AM coding underestimated the proportion of alcohol-related injuries compared to patient BAC. Implications: Given the current role of administrative data in the surveillance of alcohol-related injuries, these findings may have significant implications for the implementation of cost-effective strategies for preventing alcohol-related injuries.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy,Leadership and Management

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