Evaluation of Three Swedish ICD-10 Primary Care Versions: Reliability and Ease of Use in Diagnostic Coding
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Georg Thieme Verlag KG in Methods of Information in Medicine
- Vol. 39 (04/05) , 325-331
- https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1634399
Abstract
If computer-stored information is to be useful for purposes other than patient care, reliability of the data is of utmost importance. In primary healthcare settings, however, it has been found to be poor. This paper presents a study on the influence of coding tools on reliability and user acceptance. Six general practitioners coded 152 medical problems each by means of three versions of ICD-10, one with a compositional structure. At code level the reliability was poor and was almost identical when the three versions were compared. At aggregated level the reliability was good and somewhat better in the compositional structure. Ideas for improved user acceptance arose, and the study explored the need for several different tools to retrieve diagnostic codes.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Standards to Support Development of Terminological Systems for Healthcare TelematicsMethods of Information in Medicine, 1998
- Automatic Coding of Diagnostic ReportsMethods of Information in Medicine, 1998
- A diagnostic support system in general practice: Is it feasible?International Journal of Medical Informatics, 1997
- Measurement of pain: The psychometric properties of the Pain-O-Meter, a simple, inexpensive pain assessment tool that could change health care practicesJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1996
- Statistical methods for assessing observer variability in clinical measures.BMJ, 1992
- Can computer aided teaching packages improve clinical care in patients with acute abdominal pain?BMJ, 1991
- Plastic surgery audit codes: are the results reproducible?British Journal of Plastic Surgery, 1991
- The accuracy of recording patient problems in family practiceAcademic Medicine, 1976
- Medical records, patient care, and medical educationIrish Journal of Medical Science, 1964