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Understanding and Using NAMCS and NHAMCS Data:

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Title: Understanding and Using NAMCS and NHAMCS Data:


1
Understanding and Using NAMCS and NHAMCS
Data A Hands-On Workshop Susan M.
Schappert Donald K. Cherry
2
Overview
  • I. Survey Background and Data Uses
  • II. Technical Considerations
  • III. Getting the Data Navigate Our Website
  • IV. SETS Hands-On Training
  • Break
  • V. Using Raw Data Files
  • VI. Advanced Topics
  • VII. Summary

3
NAMCS and NHAMCS
  • National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS)
  • Visits to office-based physicians
  • National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey
    (NHAMCS)
  • Visits to hospital outpatient and emergency
    departments

4
Original NAMCS survey goals
  • National statistics
  • Professional education
  • Health policy formulation
  • Medical practice management
  • Quality assurance

5
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6
Sample design - NAMCS
  • 112 PSUs (counties)
  • Nonfederally employed, office-based physicians
    stratified by specialty
  • About 30 visits per doctor over a randomly
    selected 1-week period

7
Sample design - NHAMCS
  • 112 PSUs (counties)
  • Panel of 600 non-Federal, general or short stay
    hospitals
  • Clinics (OPDs) and emergency service areas (EDs)
  • About 200 visits per OPD,
  • 100 per ED over random 4-week period

8
Data Items
  • Patient characteristics
  • Age, sex, race, ethnicity
  • Visit characteristics
  • Source of payment, continuity of care, reason for
    visit, diagnosis, treatment
  • Provider characteristics
  • Physician specialty, hospital ownership
  • Drug characteristics added in 1980
  • Class, composition, control status, etc.

9
Repeating fields (from text entries)
  • Up to 3 fields each
  • Reason for visit
  • Physicians diagnosis
  • Cause of injury
  • Diagnostic services (6 fields)
  • Surgical procedures (2 fields)
  • Medications (6 fields)
  • Drug ingredients (5 fields)
  • Therapeutic class (3 fields 2002 on)

10
Coding Systems Used
  • Reason for Visit Classification (NCHS)
  • ICD-9-CM for diagnoses, causes of injury and
    procedures
  • Drug Classification System (NCHS)
  • National Drug Code Directory

11
Drug Data in NAMCS/ NHAMCS
  • What is a Drug Mention ?
  • Any of up to 6 medications (including Rx and
    OTC medications, immunizations, allergy shots,
    anesthetics, and dietary supplements) that were
    ordered, supplied, administered, or continued
    during the visit.
  • Respondents are asked to report trade names or
    generic names only (not dosage, administration,
    or regimen). Cant link drugs with diagnosis.

12
Drug Coding in NAMCS and NHAMCS
  • Drug entries on the Patient Record form are coded
    twice, using two separate classifications, and
    yielding two separate types of information
  • All entries are coded as written using the Drug
    Entry Coding List
  • All entries are also coded according to their
    generic substance(s) using a separate
    classification of generic substance codes

13
Drug Coding in NAMCS and NHAMCS (cont.)
  • Drug entry codes and generic substance codes are
    independent of each other
  • For example, there is a code for an entry of
    acetaminophen on the Patient Record form in the
    Drug Entry Classification and a separate code for
    acetaminophen in the Generic Classification.

14
Drug Characteristics
  • Generic Name (for single ingredient drugs)
  • Prescription Status
  • Composition Status
  • Controlled Substance Status
  • Up to 3 NDC Therapeutic Classes (4-digit)
  • Up to 5 Ingredients (for multiple ingredient
    drugs)

15
  • NAMCS or NHAMCS drug data can be analyzed
  • at the visit level (for example, the number of
    visits at which a particular drug was prescribed)
  • or at the medication level (for example, the
    number of mentions of a particular drug at
    ambulatory care visits

16
Some User Considerations
  • NAMCS/NHAMCS sample visits, not patients
  • No estimates of incidence or prevalence
  • No state-level estimates
  • We do not sample by setting or by non-physician
    providers
  • May capture different types of care for solo vs.
    group practice physicians

17
A few words about item validity
  • Counseling items from NAMCS and OPD are often
    used as analytic variables in research papers
  • Medical records are accurate in reflecting
    diagnostic services, but not health habit
    counseling (Stange et al. 1998, Gilchrist et al.
    2004)
  • Our surveys may be underestimating counseling
    services especially where data are abstracted

18
Sample Weight
  • Each NAMCS record contains a single weight, which
    we call Patient Visit Weight
  • Same is true for OPD records and ED records
  • This weight is used for both visits and drug
    mentions

19
Reliability of Estimates
  • Estimates should be based on at least 30 sample
    records AND
  • Estimates with a relative standard error
    (standard error divided by the estimate) greater
    than 30 percent are considered unreliable by NCHS
    standards
  • Both conditions should be met to obtain reliable
    estimates

20
How Good are the Estimates?
  • Depends on what you are looking at. In general,
    OPD estimates tend to be somewhat less reliable
    than NAMCS and ED.
  • Since 1999, our Advance Data reports include
    standard errors in every table so it is easy to
    compute confidence intervals around the
    estimates.

21
Reliability of Estimates in NAMCS
  • Estimate of office visits by white persons was
    766.1 million in 2002, with a relative standard
    error of 3.5 percent
  • range of 714.0-818.2 million visits
  • Estimate of office visits by black persons was
    89.5 million in 2002 with a relative standard
    error of 9.1 percent
  • range of 73.6-105.3 million visits

22
Reliability of Estimates in NHAMCS
  • OPD 9 and 12 RSE for visits by white persons
    vs. visits by black persons
  • ED 4 and 7 RSE for visits by white persons
    vs. visits by black persons
  • A higher RSE means that an estimate has a wider
    confidence interval and is less reliable.

23
Sampling Error
  • NAMCS and NHAMCS are not simple random samples
  • Clustering effects of visits within the
    physicians practice, physician practices within
    PSUs, clinics within hospitals
  • Must use some method to calculate standard errors
    for frequencies, percents, and rates

24
Calculating Variance with NAMCS/NHAMCS Estimates
  • Old way (least accurate) Generalized variance
    curves
  • Better way (recommended) Masked design
    variables
  • Multiple sampling stages
  • Single stage of sampling or ultimate cluster
    design
  • Most accurate way (expensive) Actual design
    variables

25
Comparison of RSEs Produced Using GVC,
SUDAAN-True, and SUDAAN WR
26
Comparisons of RSEs for Patient Race
  • Variances for clustered items (like race,
    diagnosis, type of provider) are predicted less
    accurately using the GVC. If you use the GVC,
    use p .01, not .05

27
Ways to Improve Reliability of Estimates
  • Combine NAMCS, ED and OPD data to produce
    ambulatory care visit estimates
  • Combine multiple years of data
  • Aggregate categories of interest into broader
    groups.

28
NAMCS vs. NHAMCS
  • Consider what types of settings are best for a
    particular analysis
  • Persons of color are more likely to visit OPDs
    and EDs than physician offices
  • Persons in some age groups make
    disproportionately larger shares of visits to
    EDs than offices and OPDs

29
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30
Additional Information
  • Call us at (301) 458-4600
  • Email me at SSchappert_at_cdc.gov
  • Visit our website
  • Join the ACLIST. Its a moderated newsgroup for
    persons interested in NAMCS/NHAMCS. It currently
    consists of more than 2,000 subscribers.
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