| Literature DB >> 32398340 |
Kate M Chitty1, Jennifer L Schumann2, Andrea Schaffer3, Rose Cairns4,5, Nicole J Gonzaga6, Jacques E Raubenheimer6, Gregory Carter7, Andrew Page8, Sallie-Anne Pearson3, Nicholas A Buckley6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In Australia, suicide is the leading cause of death for people aged 15-44 years. Health professionals deliver most of our key suicide prevention strategies via health services, but other efficacious population-level strategies include means restriction and public awareness campaigns. Currently, we have no population-level data allowing us to determine which individuals, in what parts of Australia, are likely to use our most promising interventions delivered by health services. The aims of this study are to describe: (1) health service utilisation rates in the year prior to death by suicide, and how this varies by individual case characteristics; (2) prescribed medicines use in the year prior to death by suicide, medicines used in suicide by poisoning and how this varies by individual case characteristics. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This is a population-based case series study of all suicide cases in Australia identified through the National Coronial Information System (NCIS) from 2013 to 2019. Cases will be linked to administrative claims data detailing health service use and medicines dispensed in the year before death. We will also obtain findings from the coronial enquiry, including toxicology. Descriptive statistics will be produced to characterise health service and prescribed medicine use and how utilisation varies by age, sex, method of death and socioeconomic status. We will explore the geographical variability of health service and medicine use, highlighting regions in Australia associated with more limited access. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This project involves the use of sensitive and confidential data. Data will be linked using a third-party privacy-preserving protocol meaning that investigators will not have access to identifiable information once the data have been linked. Statistical analyses will be carried out in a secure environment. This study has been approved by the following ethics committees: (1) the Justice Department Human Research Ethics Committee (REF: CF/17/23250), (2) the Western Australian Coroners Court (REF: EC 14/18 M0400), (3) the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (REF: EO2017/4/366) and (4) NSW Population & Health Services Research Ethics Committee (REF: 2017/HRE1204). Findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals, presented at conferences and communicated to regulatory authorities, clinicians and policy-makers. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: administrative data; data linkage; epidemiology; health service utilisation; medicines; mental health; retrospective; suicides
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32398340 PMCID: PMC7223353 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-038181
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Number of suicide cases meeting study inclusion criteria per year, as identified by the NCIS access liaison officer
| Year of death | Cases to be linked (n)—Australia | Cases to be linked (n)—NSW | Percentage of all NCIS cases closed by coroner* |
| 2013† | 1272 | 317 | 96.5 |
| 2014 | 2760 | 753 | 95.0 |
| 2015 | 2893 | 760 | 93.0 |
| 2016 | 2693 | 692 | 92.9 |
| 2017 | 2823 | 829 | 75.6 |
| 2018 | 1813 | 585 | 50.8 |
| 2019 | 285 | 128 | 19.9 |
| Total | 14 639 | 4064 |
*At the time of data extraction.
†Only cases after 1 July 2013 were used.
NCIS, National Coronial Information System; NSW, New South Wales.
Data sources to be linked in ASHLi
| Data set | Data description | Data provider | Geographical coverage | Coverage in years |
| Coronial cases and information | The National Coronial Information System (NCIS) is a national repository containing data on deaths reported to a coroner in Australia and New Zealand. | NCIS | Australia-wide | 1 July 2013–10 October 2019 |
| Medicines dispensing claims | Australia’s Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) is a national drug subsidy programme for the approved prescription medication and captures the dispensing of all PBS-approved medicines in Australia. | AIHW | Australia-wide | 1 July 2012–latest available before death |
| Health service records | The Medicare Benefits Scheme (MBS) is a listing of the Medicare services subsidised by the Australian government including any healthcare contacts, and any items used that are listed under the Mental Health Plan. | AIHW | Australia-wide | 1 July 2012–latest available before death |
| Death records | The NDI is a database developed and maintained by the AIHW. The database is a listing of all deaths that have occurred in Australia since 1980. | AIHW | Australia-wide | 1 July 2013–latest available |
| Admitted patient data | The Admitted Patient Data Collection (APDC) contains records of all inpatient separations (discharges, transfers and deaths) from all public, private, psychiatric and repatriation hospitals in NSW. | NSW Health APDC | NSW | 1 July 2012–latest available |
| Ambulatory mental health data | The Mental Health Ambulatory (MH-AMB) Data Collection is dedicated to the assessment, treatment, rehabilitation or care of non-admitted patients. It may include mental health day programmes, psychiatric outpatients and outreach services (eg, home visits). The data record ‘contacts’ (as opposed to ‘episodes of care’) by clinicians to a patient. | NSW Health MH-AMB data collection | NSW | 1 July 2012–latest available |
| Emergency department data | The Emergency Department Data Collection (EDDC) provides information about patient presentations to the emergency departments of public hospitals in NSW. By 2016, the EDDC captured 100% of public hospitals in NSW, prior to this time, the number of contributing hospitals steadily increased from 90 to 150 in 2010. | NSW Health EDDC | NSW | 1 July 2012–latest available |
AIHW, Australian Institute of Health and Welfare; APDC, Admitted Patient Data Collection; ASHLi, Australian Suicide Prevention using Health-Linked Data; EDDC, Emergency Department Data Collection; MH-AMB, Mental Health Ambulatory; NCIS, National Coronial Information System; NDI, National Death Index; NSW, New South Wales; PBS, Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme.
Information collected from the NCIS for each included suicide case
| Variable(s) | Description |
| Deidentified demographic variables | Year of death, age at the time of death, sex, marital status, employment status, country of birth, years in the country |
| ICD-10 – cause of death | As determined during the Australian Bureau of Statistics mortality coding process |
| Medical cause of death | As determined by the coroner |
| Incident date and time | When the incident that caused death occurred |
| Mechanism and object of injury | Mechanism by which death occurred/objects involved in the death |
| Geocoding result | Statistical areas 3 and 4 of residential address at the time of death. Statistical areas are provided by the Australian Statistical Geography Standard for use by the Australian Bureau of Statistics and others to analyse spatially integrated information |
| Toxicology report | We will document all drugs listed in each report, including their concentrations, the sample sites analysed, level of decomposition of the body and any other limitations to the toxicological testing. |