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Original Articles

Evaluation of a hospital-based injury surveillance system for monitoring road traffic deaths in Phuket, Thailand

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Pages 365-371 | Received 20 May 2018, Accepted 07 Feb 2019, Published online: 03 May 2019
 

Abstract

Objectives: The objective of this study was to evaluate and injury surveillance (IS) system’s ability to monitor road traffic deaths and the coverage of road traffic injury and death surveillance in Phuket, Thailand.

Methods: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines on surveillance system evaluation were used to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate IS. Interviews with key stakeholders focused on IS’s usefulness, simplicity, flexibility, acceptability, and stability. Active case finding of 2014 road traffic deaths in all paper and electronic hospital record systems was used to assess system sensitivity, positive predictive value, and data quality. Electronic data matching software was used to determine the implications of combining IS data with other provincial-level data sources (e.g., death certificates, electronic vehicle insurance claim system).

Results: Evaluation results indicated that IS was useful, flexible, acceptable, and stable, with a high positive predictive value (99%). Simplicity was limited due to the burden of collecting data on all injuries and use of paper-based data collection forms. Sensitivity was low, with IS only identifying 55% of hospital road traffic death cases identified during active case finding; however, IS cases were representative of cases identified. Data accuracy and completeness varied across data fields. Combining IS with active case finding, death certificates, and the electronic vehicle insurance claim system more than doubled the number of road traffic death cases identified in Phuket.

Conclusion: An efficient and comprehensive road traffic injury and death surveillance system is critical for monitoring Phuket’s road traffic burden. The hospital-based IS system is a useful system for monitoring road traffic deaths and assessing risk behaviors. However, the complexity of data collection and limited coverage hinders the ability of IS to fully represent road traffic deaths in Phuket Province. Combining data sources could improve coverage and should be considered.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge Dr. Siddharudha Shivalli for editing this article; the Road Accident Victims Protection Company Limited, provincial health office, and the local hospital for providing road traffic death data; Bureau of Non-Communicable Diseases, MOPH, for organizing fieldwork and cooperating in the field study; and the 8th Southeast Asia and Western Pacific Bi-regional TEPHINET for giving us the opportunity to present findings of this evaluation.

Additional information

Funding

We thank the Thailand Ministry of Public Health–U.S. CDC Collaboration for supporting this work.

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