Development and characteristics of the Provincial Overdose Cohort in British Columbia, Canada

被引:38
|
作者
MacDougall, Laura [1 ]
Smolina, Kate [1 ,2 ]
Otterstatter, Michael [1 ,2 ]
Zhao, Bin [1 ]
Chong, Mei [1 ]
Godfrey, David [3 ]
Mussavi-Rizi, Ali [4 ]
Sutherland, Jenny [5 ]
Kuo, Margot [1 ]
Kendall, Perry [5 ]
机构
[1] British Columbia Ctr Dis Control, Vancouver, BC, Canada
[2] Univ British Columbia, Sch Populat & Publ Hlth, Vancouver, BC, Canada
[3] British Columbia Minist Hlth, Data Management & Stewardship Branch, Victoria, BC, Canada
[4] Prov Hlth Serv Author, Performance Measurement & Reporting, Vancouver, BC, Canada
[5] British Columbia Minist Hlth, Off Prov Hlth Officer, Victoria, BC, Canada
来源
PLOS ONE | 2019年 / 14卷 / 01期
关键词
OPIOID OVERDOSE; PUBLIC-HEALTH;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0210129
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Introduction British Columbia (BC), Canada declared a public health emergency in April 2016 for opioid overdose. Comprehensive data was needed to identify risk factors, inform interventions, and evaluate response actions. We describe the development of an overdose cohort, including linkage strategy, case definitions, and data governance model, and present the resulting characteristics, including data linkage yields and case overlap among data sources. Methods Overdose events from hospital admissions, physician visits, poison centre and ambulance calls, emergency department visits, and coroner's data were grouped into episodes if records were present in multiple sources. A minimum of five years of universal health care records (all prescription dispensations, fee-for-service physician billings, emergency department visits and hospitalizations) were appended for each individual. A 20% random sample of BC residents and a 1: 5 matched case-control set were generated. Consultation and prioritization ensured analysts worked to address questions to directly inform public health actions. Results 10,456 individuals suffered 14,292 overdoses from January 1, 2015 to Nov 30, 2016. Only 28% of overdose events were found in more than one dataset with the unique contribution of cases highest from ambulance records (32%). Compared with fatal overdoses, non-fatal events more often involved females, younger individuals (20 to 29 years) and those 60 or older. In 78% of illegal drug deaths, there was no associated ambulance response. In the year prior to first recorded overdose, 60% of individuals had at least one ED visit, 31% at least one hospital admission, 80% at least one physician visit, and 87% had filled at least one prescription in a community pharmacy. Conclusion While resource-intensive to establish, a linked cohort is useful for characterizing the full extent of the epidemic, defining sub-populations at risk, and patterns of contact with the health system. Overdose studies in other jurisdictions should consider the inclusion of multiple data sources.
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页数:17
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