Canadian administrative hospital discharge data contain a diagnosis-type indicator for each coded diagnosis that allows researchers to distinguish complications from pre-existing diagnoses. Given that the validity of diagnosis-type indicators is unknown, we conducted a detailed chart review to evaluate the accuracy of diagnosis-type indicators for flagging complications.
We obtained administrative hospital discharge data for 1,200 randomly selected adult inpatient separations in Calgary, Alberta, occurring between April 1, 1996 and March 31, 1997. Each discharge record contains up to 16 diagnoses and 16 corresponding diagnosis-type indicators (value of "2"=complication). The corresponding medical charts were reviewed for evidence of diagnoses and complications. A complication was defined as a new diagnosis arising after the start of hospitalization. We determined the extent to which the diagnosis-type indicator in the administrative data agreed with the chart reviewer's assessment (criterion standard) of whether a diagnosis was a complication or not.
The agreement for complications between the two databases varied greatly across 12 conditions studied (kappa range: 0-0.72) and was often low (kappa