Who Gets a Code for Obesity? Reliability, Use, and Implications of Combining International Classification of Diseases-Based Obesity Codes, 2014-2021.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS Childhood Obesity Pub Date : 2024-11-04 DOI:10.1089/chi.2024.0267
Lyudmyla Kompaniyets, Samantha Pierce, Brook Belay, Alyson B Goodman
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Abstract

Background: Many studies rely on the International Classification of Diseases, 9th or 10th Revision, Clinical Modification codes to define obesity in electronic health records data. While prior studies found misclassification and low sensitivity of codes for pediatric obesity, it remains unclear whether this misclassification is random and what are the implications of combining different code types to define obesity. Methods: We assessed prevalence, sensitivity, and specificity of obesity codes among 7.4 million children aged 2-19 years over 2014-2021. Among those with obesity in 2021, we estimated the probability of receiving any code or a specific code type by patient characteristics. Results: Obesity code utilization increased in prevalence from 3.9% in 2014 to 9.8% in 2021; prevalence of obesity based on BMI increased from 17.4% to 20.5%. Code sensitivity increased from 19.8% to 40.8%. Among children with obesity in 2021, those with severe obesity (reference: no severe obesity) and chronic disease (reference: no chronic disease) were more likely to get a code, and the highest likelihood was associated with obesity diagnosis codes (vs. status codes). Conclusions: Despite increases, obesity code utilization remained low. Obesity code misclassification is not random and certain child characteristics (e.g., severe obesity or chronic disease) are associated with a higher probability of getting a code. There are also significant differences by code type; thus, caution should be taken before combining obesity codes as a proxy for obesity status, especially in longitudinal analyses. More universal documentation of obesity may improve the quality of care and the use of these data for evaluation and research purposes.

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谁会获得肥胖症代码?2014-2021年基于国际疾病分类的肥胖症代码组合的可靠性、使用和影响。
背景:许多研究依赖《国际疾病分类》第 9 版或第 10 版临床修订版代码来定义电子健康记录数据中的肥胖症。虽然之前的研究发现小儿肥胖症的代码存在分类错误和灵敏度低的问题,但目前仍不清楚这种分类错误是否是随机的,也不清楚结合不同的代码类型来定义肥胖症会产生什么影响。方法:我们评估了 2014-2021 年间 740 万 2-19 岁儿童肥胖症代码的流行率、灵敏度和特异性。在 2021 年患有肥胖症的儿童中,我们根据患者特征估算了收到任何代码或特定代码类型的概率。结果:肥胖症代码使用率从 2014 年的 3.9% 增加到 2021 年的 9.8%;基于体重指数的肥胖症患病率从 17.4% 增加到 20.5%。代码敏感性从 19.8% 增加到 40.8%。在 2021 年的肥胖儿童中,有严重肥胖(参考:无严重肥胖)和慢性病(参考:无慢性病)的儿童更有可能获得代码,而肥胖诊断代码(与状态代码相比)的可能性最高。结论:尽管肥胖代码使用率有所上升,但仍然很低。肥胖代码的错误分类并非随机的,某些儿童特征(如严重肥胖或慢性疾病)与获得代码的可能性较高有关。不同代码类型之间也存在明显差异;因此,在将肥胖代码合并作为肥胖状况的替代物之前应谨慎行事,尤其是在纵向分析中。对肥胖症进行更普遍的记录可提高护理质量,并将这些数据用于评估和研究目的。
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来源期刊
Childhood Obesity
Childhood Obesity PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
95
期刊介绍: Childhood Obesity is the only peer-reviewed journal that delivers actionable, real-world obesity prevention and weight management strategies for children and adolescents. Health disparities and cultural sensitivities are addressed, and plans and protocols are recommended to effect change at the family, school, and community level. The Journal also reports on the problem of access to effective healthcare and delivers evidence-based solutions to overcome these barriers.
期刊最新文献
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