| Frequently Asked Questions: |
Data Sets
Abortion
- Does
the Abortion Rate include Fetal Deaths?
- NO,
abortion rate, pregnancy rate and abortion percent DO NOT include fetal
deaths. If you are looking at CHS tables note that while abortion
tables DO NOT include fetal deaths, pregnancy tables
DO. Therefore, VistaPHw numbers may not match CHS numbers.
Birth
- Why are the calculated gestational age data different
from previous versions of
VistaPHw?
- The gestational age
in weeks is calculated by subtracting the date of last normal menses from
the birth date, dividing by 7 and truncating the result to eliminate decimal
places. If the menses day is
missing but the month and year are present, a value of '15' is used for the
day.
In previous data files (issued
before 2006), if the menses month and/or year were missing or the calculated
gestational age was beyond a reasonable range (<18 or >45 weeks), the
gestational age was estimated from the child's birth weight.
Currently, if the gestational age
cannot be calculated because of missing menses dates or the calculated age is
out of range, the clinical estimate is used. If the clinical estimate is also out of
range or unknown, the calculated age is unknown. For 1980-88, the birth certificate did
not collect the clinical estimate.
For these years, only the gestational age calculated from the menses date
is included in this field. In all
other cases, the calculated age is unknown.
This change makes the
Washington
State data consistent with data published by the
National
Center for Health
Statistics (NCHS).
- Why is maternal smoking by trimester and BMI only
available after 2003?
- Maternal smoking by trimester and BMI were added
to the 2003 revised birth certificate. We do not have data prior to that
time.
- Why are anemia and alcohol use no longer available?
- Maternal anemia and alcohol use are not collected
in the 2003 revised birth certificate.
CHARS
- What
is the difference between CHARS duplicated vs. unduplicated
data?
VistaPHw currently includes hospitalization data (CHARS data) which consists
of all discharges from WA hospitals in a given year. Some patients may be
hospitalized and discharged more than once in any given year so they appear more
than once in the data. In the
past, an unduplicated dataset has been available, which allows the data to be
analyzed by patient rather than hospitalization. This file is under review by
the DOH Center for Health Statistics.
- Does
the hospitalization data in VistaPHw include residents outside of
Washington?
No,
the hospitalization data in VistaPHw only includes
Washington state
residents.
We are currently exploring the addition of hospitalizations of
WA residents in Oregon, Veteran Administration, and military hospitals.
Death
- How are the underlying causes of death
grouped in VistaPHw?
Due to the detailed nature of the ICD classification
system, it is common to group ICD codes into more general categories for
analysis and comparison purposes. VistaPHw uses the classification system provided
by the National Center for Health
Statistics (NCHS) in which causes of deaths for adults are grouped into 113
separate groups and deaths for infants into 130 groups. NCHS groupings are also
used in the Washington State Center for Health Statistics publications.
Sub-County Population
·
The Data Set is an "Unofficial Estimate", what does that
mean?
The unofficial sub-county estimates were
developed for public health assessment only, and not for estimating the
population of cities, towns, and counties. Official population estimates
for cities, towns, and counties are produced under the authority of the Office
of Financial Management (OFM) in accordance with RCW 43.62.020 and RCW
36.12.100. The OFM estimates are developed for official state
planning, funding and program administration issues. Under no
circumstances should the "unofficial" sub-county population estimates be
used for these purposes.
·
What levels of geography are available in
VistaPHw?
Each
Local Health Jurisdiction has access to sub-county estimates specific to their
geographic region. Currently, all
LHJs have access to their own zip code, census tract, and block group denominator estimates and hospitalization numerator
data.
This can be accessed by changing the Data Collection
Folder from WA to your LHJ. Please contact the
VistaPHw coordinator if you are not
able to access your local data.
·
The estimates produce differing rates, why is that?
OR I ran a new year of data in
VistaPHw and
there is a large difference between the old data and the new year of data.
What's happened?
For each iteration of the population
estimates, the new estimates in
VistaPHw supersede the old
population estimates, so that the same methodology of
estimation is applied to all years of data. We recommend re-running
historical data for comparison. Since the entire denominator data (population)
changed, the rates will be slightly different. So while we expect you to see
some differences in the rates, if you notice something unusual, please
contact the VistaPHw Coordinator at Buffi.LaDue@doh.wa.gov
.
·
OFM does population estimation, so why is there a different
set?
Top
Epidemiology
- Why
should I use 2000 vs. 1940 Age-adjusted standards?
- Age-adjusted
rates are used when you want to do comparisons. For example, you may
want to compare your rate to another county's rate or to the state rate
where the age structures of the two populations may be different. To
compare the rates between these areas, you need to use the same
standard population. Currently, the most commonly used standard is the 2000
US Standard population. However, you should always check to make sure
the age-adjusted rates you are using for the comparison is based on the same
standard. (Some cancer data is age adjusted to the 1970 US
population.) If you use the 1940
US population as your standard but another
county uses the 2000
US population, then these
age-adjusted rates cannot be compared.
Because the population has changed since 1940 it makes
sense to update the standard population that everyone should use in order to
draw comparisons. In 1999, the US Standard population changed to a
projected year 2000 age distribution. This population distribution is
closer to the actual age structures of most areas in the late 1990s compared to
the 1940 age distribution which has fewer elderly people. As a result,
age-adjusted rates using the year 2000 standard may appear closer to the crude
rates. It is important to remember that age-adjusted rates are still
hypothetical rates. Specifically, an age-adjusted rate is the one that
would occur if your county had the same age structure as the standard
population.
- What
is the difference between generating counts using a crude rate or an
age-adjusted rate?
- If
you want to get a number of events in a particular population, or count, it
is appropriate to use the crude rate statistic. This will give you the
total number of events. If you use the age-adjusted rate, the count
will exclude any event where age was not provided. So, the total
number of events will probably be lower than the actual
count.
- Why
are the counts for the state total different for Age-adjusted vs. Crude
rates?
- An
age-adjusted rate is calculated by computing a weighted average of
age-specific rates. On the other
hand, crude rates do not include age. Cases where age is unknown can
be included in the numerator for crude rates but, not age-adjusted
rates. This makes the total count higher for the crude rate.
The age-specific and age-adjusted counts should be
equal.
-
Can
differing Population Denominator sources cause discrepancies in
rates?
-
Population denominators can be the probable cause of the discrepancy in
rates. We have found that even a small difference in denominators,
such as using the original OFM series in rounded or unrounded format, is
enough to produce such discrepancies in rates.
- Why
do population counts for the same geographic area sometimes seem to
differ?
-
Counties are defined two ways. One uses Census boundaries (“actual”) versus
a ZIP-defined county boundary. ZIP code areas often cross county boundaries.
This means a ZIP code definition of a county can differ from the actual
boundary, and the population counts differ because they are defined by
different geographic boundaries. This is most frequently seen in
hospitalization data. In this assessment topic, the population
figures are given for ZIP code boundaries--and may be aggregated to the
group of ZIP codes that most closely define a county's boundary--because
hospitalization numerator data (i.e., counts of hospitalizations) are only
available by ZIP code.
-
What
is the difference between BINOMIAL and POISSON Confidence Intervals?
- The
1994 PHIP recommends that if there are 100 or fewer events or the rate is
less than 10%, 95% Poisson confidence intervals should be calculated. If
there are more than 100 events and the rate is greater than 10%, then the
normal approximation to the binomial is recommended (in
VistaPHw this is labeled "binomial").
- In
reality, the appropriate distribution that describes these outcomes for
people (i.e., death/no death, birth/no birth, low birthweight/normal
birthweight, etc.) is the binomial distribution. Calculation of exact
binomial confidence intervals involves complex mathematics. However,
conveniently, for rare events, the Poisson distribution (by Ury &
Wiggins) approximates the binomial distribution, and for non-rare events the
normal distribution approximates the binomial distribution. It is relatively
straightforward to calculate confidence intervals for Poisson and normal
variables, so these methods are in
VistaPHw.
Thus, in
VistaPHw, when "binomial" confidence
intervals are specified, what is actually calculated are confidence
intervals based on the normal approximation to the binomial distribution
rather than exact binomial confidence intervals.
As for the
PHIP recommendations, it is necessary to have a universal rule of thumb,
although, like most of these general recommendations, it's probably not
always correct; for instance, in runs recently done with
King
County data it seemed to make more
sense to start using binomial CIs at a 5% prevalence (calculated with Stata
5.0 cii command). But the results for every county would probably be
different. If alot is riding on where the CIs fall and the CIs are
very close to overlapping, it's probably a good idea to calculate exact
binomial CIs. In practice it probably won't make a difference because the
difference between the two methods usually is, at most, in the first decimal
place of the rate.
Another minor note about terminology: the terms confidence
intervals and confidence limits are different.
VistaPHw calculates both confidence limits and the confidence
interval. The confidence limits are labeled "UB" for Upper Bound and "LB"
for Lower Bound in the excel output. The confidence interval is the
distance between the upper and lower bound of the confidence limits. The
"upper interval" is the distance from the rate to the upper bound (analogous
definition for "lower interval").
Top
Error Messages
Problem is most likely a 'rights' problem - an
administrator needs to allow the user a higher level of
access
Problem can be fixed by uninstalling/reinstalling or
deleting the C:\Program Files\VISTAPHW\USA folder and all its subfolders, then
logging back on to
VistaPHw
The windows installer service cannot update the file
c:/winin/system32/scrrun.dll because the file is protected by windows. You
may need to update your OS.
Many people in the health assessment field have had this
problem because it is related to EpiInfo 2000.
Solution:
After both systems are installed, you can repair the
EpiInfo mischief by re-registering the system version of scrrun.dll. Both
systems should then function properly. Here's
how:
1. click Start, Run.
2. type "Regsvr32 c:\winnt\system32\scrrun.dll"
(without quotes).
3. press Enter, wait for success message.
If you have a system other than Windows 2000 and
encounter this problem, use the same solution except in step 2 change the path
to the location of scrrun.dll on your hard drive.
Top
ICD-10 Codes
- What
is the significance of the implementation of ICD-10
code?
Beginning with deaths occurring in January 1999, the
United
States began using International Classification
of Diseases (ICD-10) to classify causes of death reported on death
certificates. Prior to this, ICD-9
was used
from1979-1998. Implementation of
ICD-10 has had an important impact on the presentation and interpretation of
mortality statistics by cause-of-death.
The change to ICD-10 created a discontinuity in trends that must be
accounted for when comparing mortality during 1999 and later to prior
years. To put it another way,
cause-of-death data for 1999 and later years are not comparable to prior
years, unless adjustments are made for the coding and classification
changes. Without adjustment, it is
impossible to know whether an observed increase or decrease in deaths due to a
particular cause is "real" or merely the result of the changes in classification
and coding. For further information
on the changes, please click on the links below:
Washington
State, Center for Health Statistics, ICD-10 Information
Page
National
Center
for Health Statistics web site: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/major/dvs/icd10des.htm
- How do you adjust for the change between
ICD-9 and ICD-10?
To enable comparisons
across the ICD-9 to ICD-10 transition, a comparability study was carried out by
the
National
Center for Health
Statistics (NCHS). NCHS double-coded large samples of the 1996 national
mortality file, once by ICD-9, and again by ICD-10. A comparability ratio
was then calculated by dividing the number of deaths for a selected cause of
death classified by ICD-10 by the number of deaths classified to the most
nearly comparable cause
of death by ICD-9. The resulting ratio can be used to adjust
counts and rates for a given cause of death classified by ICD-9 so they
are comparable to those for the most similar cause classified by ICD-10. The
ratio will also allow users to estimate the extent of the discontinuity of the
change to ICD-10 by showing the
net effect of coding and
classification changes.
·
How are
comparability ratios applied?
The comparability ratio is multiplied by counts or rates calculated for time periods
that are classified by ICD-9. For example, there were 1,717 deaths due to pneumonia
and influenza (ICD-9 480-487) to residents of Washington residents in 1998.
Applying the comparability ratio of 0.70 to the 1998 number of deaths (1,717) will give
the adjusted number of 1,202 deaths due to pneumonia and influenza. This modified
count can be compared to the 1,258 deaths due to pneumonia and influenza (ICD-10
J10-J18) that occurred in 1999. Thus, after adjusting for the effects of the ICD revision
change, there was only an increase of 56 deaths in 1999 (instead of a large decrease
when comparing unadjusted counts).
For a
guide on how to present ICD-10 Mortality Data go to:
http://www.doh.wa.gov/ehsphl/chs/chs-data/death/icd10/ICD10Gud.pdf
Top
Installation/Login
- If
you are having trouble logging in to VistaPHw here are some things to check
and remember:
a. The Login ID is your full email
address
b. The Password is case
sensitive
c. To access Washington State Department of Health
Data, make sure this URL is highlighted
https://fortress.wa.gov/doh/chstwo/VistaPHw
d. Also, make sure that the above URL is correct, if
not go to the Datalinks.txt file in the VistaPHw folder under Program Files, and
correct the URL
Additional
useful information:
If you do not have "write access" to your c:\program
files and the c:\VistaPHw folders on your PC, you may need to have an
administrator assist you with the quick update. Users who do not have
Adobe SVG Viewer software installed on their PC will need to download
Adobe Company's free SVG Viewer
3.03 (
http://www.adobe.com/svg/viewer/install/main.html). This
will only need to be done the first time the mapping function is used. If
you can not run .exe (executable) files, you may need assistance from
your IT department to install SVG.exe.
Top
Output
- How
do I get the year to show in my output even when the count is
zero?
- The
next time you LAUNCH, click on PREFERENCES, then check on PADDING.
Click the help button next to the Padding checkbox for an explanation.
The year should appear even when the count is zero.
VistaPHw Interface, Title Bars and other
functionality questions
- What
are Title Bars in
VistaPHw used
for?
- Click
the title bars to "select all"
- Example:
Left click the title bar "WA Counties" to select all of the counties in WA
at once
- How
do I Select/Unselect in
VistaPHw?
- Left
clicking selects, right clicking unselects.
- Holding
the left or right mouse button down while dragging the mouse will
select/unselect several choices with a single click
- Why
are there two types of
County
Codes?
-
The
state and federal government assign different codes to counties. For
example, King county is assigned two county codes: 17 and 33. The 17
is the Washington State Department of Health county code. The 33 is the
Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) code. The equation for
determining this federal code is (DOH county code * 2) - 1.
Other VistaPHw Installation Issues
-
No map is produced when requested
Check to make sure you have installed the adobe SVG viewer.
If it is not installed on your local drive you will need to go to
http://www.adobe.com/svg/viewer/install/ and install the appropriate
version. You may need to contact your IT support to do this as it may
require admin rights to your local drive.
PowerPoint Viewer is a free software product that does not
come standard with the full version of MS PowerPoint. You will need to
have this downloaded onto your local drive. It is likely that this
will require admin rights, and thus IT support help. The software can
be downloaded from: http://www.doh.wa.gov/Viewer.htm
You may not have admin rights to that area on your local
drive. Please contact your IT support for additional information.
If you have questions that are not
answered here, please email the VistaPHw Coordinator:
buffi.ladue@doh.wa.gov