1 / 15

AUTOMATIC CODING SYSTEMS FOR MORTALITY DATA Prague, Czech Republic, June 3 – 5 2004

AUTOMATIC CODING SYSTEMS FOR MORTALITY DATA Prague, Czech Republic, June 3 – 5 2004. Electronic registration in Great Britain: Scottish perspective. Graham Jackson General Register Office for Scotland. Civil registration in Scotland.

Télécharger la présentation

AUTOMATIC CODING SYSTEMS FOR MORTALITY DATA Prague, Czech Republic, June 3 – 5 2004

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AUTOMATIC CODING SYSTEMS FOR MORTALITY DATAPrague, Czech Republic, June 3 – 5 2004

  2. Electronic registration in Great Britain: Scottish perspective Graham Jackson General Register Office for Scotland

  3. Civil registration in Scotland • Compulsory civil registration started in 1855 following the setting up of the General Register Office for Scotland (GROS) by Act of Parliament in 1854 • Responsibility for administering civil registration is divided between the head of GROS (the Registrar General) and the local councils

  4. Civil registration in Scotland ctd. • The Registrar General, has overall responsibilty for any legislative change, the range of information collected, and the fees collected. • The 32 councils employ some 360 registrars and provide premises and IT equipment. The local registrars deal with births, stillbirths, deaths and marriages.

  5. Legislative background • The main laws relating to registration in Scotland are • Registration of Births, Deaths and Marriages (Scotland) Act 1965 • Marriages (Scotland) Act 1977 • Legislation is now the responsibility of the Scottish Parliament (which was reconvened on 1 July 1999 after 292 years).

  6. The computerisation of local registration offices - COLRO • Project commenced in 1988 • Drew on experience in England and Wales but … • … was a completely separate system • An initial trial site in Edinburgh went live in 1991. • By 1996 some 85% of events were handled electronically; by 2003 this had risen to 99%.

  7. Scottish Registration Software • Deals with births, deaths and marriages • Information is keyed by the Registrar • Pop-up help and prompts • The details entered can be checked on-screen by the informant

  8. Technical aspects • A relatively ‘low-tech’ approach had to be adopted. • SRS was developed as a DOS system that could run on low specification PCs ( e.g. 386 with 4Mb) • Mainly written in CA-Clipper; a number of third party products for the Clipper environment were also used.

  9. SRS - data transfer • Data are submitted by post on diskettes • Files are encrypted • Provision for rapid supply of a back-up file • Manual offices submit paper returns by post; these are keyed by skilled data preparation staff

  10. Death registration - information collected • Forename(s), surname, sex, date of birth, marital status, occupation, usual residence, country of birth • date, time, and place of death; full cause of death text, post-mortem indicator, pregnancy indicator, • Name and address of certifying doctor and, if different, deceased’s own doctor • Details about parents and, where appropriate, spouse

  11. The benefits of electronic data capture of cause of death etc. • Input to automatic coding • Output for medical enquiries • Output for research studies • Ability to carry out text searches on cause of death • specific cause e.g. hypothermia • specific drug e.g. methadone • to analyse terminology on certificates

  12. Recent developments – the Forward Electronic Register (FER) • A central application - which allows simple updating of systems • Accessed with a web browser – has the look and feel of a web site • A central repository - with instantaneous data transfer • Allows electronic distribution of supporting registration material • Scheduled for full implementation during 2004

  13. FER – Technical aspects • FER is a web application, written in Java. • The interface is a mixture of HTML and Java Server Pages • Pilot running has shown the need for some system upgrades at the centre

  14. Future developments- electronic certification • Benefits of electronic certification would include • rapid transfer of information to registrars • guidance for physicians could be integrated with the system • automatic spell-checkers • physicians could retain an electronic copy of information supplied

  15. AUTOMATIC CODING SYSTEMS FOR MORTALITY DATAPrague, Czech Republic, June 3 – 5 2004

More Related