1. Validation of suicide and self-harm records in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink.
- Author
-
Thomas, Kyla H., Davies, Neil, Metcalfe, Chris, Windmeijer, Frank, Martin, Richard M., and Gunnell, David
- Subjects
- *
SUICIDE , *SELF-mutilation , *DRUG side effects , *MEDICAL databases , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Aims The UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink ( CPRD) is increasingly being used to investigate suicide-related adverse drug reactions. No studies have comprehensively validated the recording of suicide and nonfatal self-harm in the CPRD. We validated general practitioners' recording of these outcomes using linked Office for National Statistics ( ONS) mortality and Hospital Episode Statistics ( HES) admission data. Methods We identified cases of suicide and self-harm recorded using appropriate Read codes in the CPRD between 1998 and 2010 in patients aged ≥15 years. Suicides were defined as patients with Read codes for suicide recorded within 95 days of their death. International Classification of Diseases codes were used to identify suicides/hospital admissions for self-harm in the linked ONS and HES data sets. We compared CPRD-derived cases/incidence of suicide and self-harm with those identified from linked ONS mortality and HES data, national suicide incidence rates and published self-harm incidence data. Results Only 26.1% ( n = 590) of the 'true' ( ONS-confirmed) suicides were identified using Read codes. Furthermore, only 55.5% of Read code-identified suicides were confirmed as suicide by the ONS data. Of the HES-identified cases of self-harm, 68.4% were identified in the CPRD using Read codes. The CPRD self-harm rates based on Read codes had similar age and sex distributions to rates observed in self-harm hospital registers, although rates were underestimated in all age groups. Conclusions The CPRD recording of suicide using Read codes is unreliable, with significant inaccuracy (over- and under-reporting). Future CPRD suicide studies should use linked ONS mortality data. The under-reporting of self-harm appears to be less marked. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF