| Literature DB >> 21849031 |
Ingo Langner1, Rafael Mikolajczyk, Edeltraut Garbe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health insurance claims data are increasingly used for health services research in Germany. Hospital diagnoses in these data are coded according to the International Classification of Diseases, German modification (ICD-10-GM). Due to the historical division into West and East Germany, different coding practices might persist in both former parts. Additionally, the introduction of Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs) in Germany in 2003/2004 might have changed the coding. The aim of this study was to investigate regional and temporal variations in coding of hospitalisation diagnoses in Germany.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21849031 PMCID: PMC3170186 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
ICD-10-GM Codes for Oesophageal and Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding Categorised by Diagnosis Subgroup
| Diagnosis group | Diagnosis subgroup regarding type of coding | Codes | Description of coded diseases |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oesophageal | unspecific | K92.0 | Haematemesis |
| bleeding | specific | I85.0 | Oesophageal varices with bleeding |
| K22.6 | Mallory-Weiss Syndrome, | ||
| K22.8 | Other specified diseases of oesophagus | ||
| Upper | unspecific | K92.2 | Gastrointestinal haemorrhage, unspecified |
| gastrointestinal bleeding | Specific | K25.0 | Gastric ulcer, acute with haemorrhage |
| K25.2 | Gastric ulcer, acute with both haemorrhage and perforation | ||
| K25.4 | Gastric ulcer, chronic or unspecified with haemorrhage | ||
| K25.6 | Gastric ulcer, chronic or unspecified with both haemorrhage and perforation | ||
| K26.0 | Duodenal ulcer, acute with haemorrhage | ||
| K26.2 | Duodenal ulcer, acute with both haemorrhage and perforation | ||
| K26.4 | Duodenal ulcer, chronic or unspecified with haemorrhage | ||
| K26.6 | Duodenal ulcer, chronic or unspecified with both haemorrhage and perforation | ||
| K27.0 | Peptic ulcer, site unspecified, acute with haemorrhage | ||
| K27.2 | Peptic ulcer, site unspecified, acute with both haemorrhage and perforation | ||
| K27.4 | Peptic ulcer, site unspecified, chronic or unspecified with haemorrhage | ||
| K27.6 | Peptic ulcer, site unspecified, chronic or unspecified with both haemorrhage and perforation | ||
| K28.0 | Gastrojejunal ulcer, acute with haemorrhage | ||
| K28.2 | Gastrojejunal ulcer, acute with both haemorrhage and perforation | ||
| K28.4 | Gastrojejunal ulcer, chronic or unspecified with haemorrhage | ||
| K28.6 | Gastrojejunal ulcer, chronic or unspecified with both haemorrhage and perforation | ||
| K29.0 | Acute haemorrhagic gastritis | ||
Figure 1Incidence of Gastrointestinal Bleeding Diagnoses by Sex and Year. Annual sex-specific incidence of hospitalisations due to upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) or oesophageal bleeding (OB) per 100,000 population.
Figure 2Incidence of Gastrointestinal Bleeding Diagnoses by Age and Sex. Sex and age-specific incidence of hospitalisations due to upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB: left) and oesophageal bleeding (OB: right) in 2005 per 100,000 population.
Figure 3Percentage of Unspecific Codes for Oesophageal Bleeding by Sex, Region and Year. Cases with unspecific diagnosis in % of all cases with any diagnosis concerning hospitalisations for oesophageal bleeding for men and women in former West Germany (West G.) and former East Germany (East G.) with 95% confidence intervals (vertical bars).
Figure 4Percentage of Unspecific Codes for Gastrointestinal Bleeding by Sex, Region and Year. Cases with unspecific diagnosis in % of all cases with any diagnosis concerning hospitalisations for upper gastrointestinal bleeding for men and women in former West Germany (West G.) and former East Germany (East G.) with 95% confidence intervals (vertical bars: only visible if not obscured by symbols for point estimates).
Figure 5Incidence Ratios of Specific, Unspecific and all Oesophageal Bleeding Diagnoses for former Eastern Germany compared to former Western Germany. Incidence ratios of specific, unspecific and any coding of hospitalisations for oesophageal bleeding comparing former East Germany versus former West Germany with 95% confidence intervals (vertical bars).
Figure 6Incidence Ratios of Specific, Unspecific and all Gastrointestinal Bleeding Diagnoses for former Eastern Germany compared to former Western Germany. Incidence ratios of specific, unspecific and any coding of hospitalisations for upper gastrointestinal bleeding comparing former East Germany versus former West Germany with 95% confidence intervals (vertical bars).