TY - JOUR TI - Death certificate coding practices related to diabetes in European countries--the 'EURODIAB Subarea C' Study AU - Jougla, E AU - Papoz, L AU - Balkau, B AU - Maguin, P AU - Hatton, F T2 - International Journal of Epidemiology AB - The objective of this study was to compare and analyse coding practices for diabetes mortality data in nine European countries (Belgium, Republic of Ireland, France, Germany, Malta, The Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Switzerland). In each country, a sample of 200 coded death certificates, which mentioned diabetes, was randomly sampled. All death certificates were recoded at the WHO Collaborating Centre for the Classification of Diseases in the French language. The results show wide differences between national coding and central coding. Discrepancies in the underlying cause of death existed at the 3-digit coding level for 26% of all death certificates and for 44% at the 4-digit level. Coding in Northern Ireland and Malta was characterized by a marked tendency to choose diabetes less frequently. In contrast, in The Netherlands and, to a lesser extent, in the Republic of Ireland and France, diabetes was more frequently selected as the underlying cause of death. Most of the differences concerned the coding of an association involving diabetes and circulatory system diseases. In some countries, these coding differences influence the reported level of diabetes mortality. For Northern Ireland and Malta, the number of certificates with diabetes as the underlying cause of death was more than doubled after central recoding and for The Netherlands, in contrast, it was almost halved. To explain the differences a number of factors are considered: a lack of information from the International Classification of Diseases (ICD), on the application of the coding rules, between-country differences in cause of death certification practices, a divergence of opinion about the causal role of diabetes when it is associated with other conditions, a lack of homogeneity between countries in data collection procedures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) CN - 0050 DA - 1992/04// PY - 1992 DP - NCBI PubMed VL - 21 IS - 2 SP - 343 EP - 351 J2 - Int J Epidemiol SN - 0300-5771 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1428491 Y2 - 2012/06/27/13:17:37 KW - Data Collection KW - Diabetes Mellitus KW - Europe KW - Humans KW - International Cooperation KW - World Health Organization ER -