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Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group logoLink to Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group
. 2007 May 21;16(3):162–168. doi: 10.3132/pcrj.2007.00013

Do people self-reporting information about chronic respiratory disease have corroborative evidence in their general practice medical records? A study of intermethod reliability

Lisa Iversen 1,*, Philip C Hannaford 1, David J Godden 2, David B Price 1
PMCID: PMC6634198  PMID: 17516010

Abstract

Aims:

To use intermethod reliability to compare self-reported data about chronic respiratory disease and health service utilisation with data contained in general practice medical records.

Methods:

Self-reported postal questionnaire information from a small cohort of an age-sex stratified sample of 2318 patients was compared with information contained in their medical records. The agreement between the two sources of information was assessed.

Results:

The case notes of 115/135 individuals from eight general practices were examined. For self-reported chest injury or operation (κ, κ=−0.03), or chronic bronchitis (κ=0.10), agreement was poor. Agreement for self-reported pleurisy (κ=0.32), hay fever or rhinitis (κ=0.40), or eczema or dermatitis (κ=0.30) was fair; for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or emphysema (κ=0.56), or heart trouble (κ=0.54), agreement was moderate; for asthma (κ=0.78) or pneumonia (κ=0.62), agreement was good; and for pulmonary tuberculosis (κ=0.88), agreement was very good. The strength of agreement for information about health service utilisation for respiratory problems ranged from moderate to very good and was good for smoking status.

Conclusions:

Although based on small numbers, our results suggest good or very good agreement between self-reported data and general practice medical records for the absence or presence of some respiratory conditions and some types of respiratory-related health care utilisation. Depending on the research question being examined self-reported information may be appropriate.

Keywords: agreement, chronic respiratory disease, intermethod reliability, medical records, postal questionnaire, self-report

Full Text

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Footnotes

Professor David B Price isa member of the international editorial board of the Primary Care Respiratory Journal. Otherwise the authors have no conflicts of interest.


Articles from Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group are provided here courtesy of Primary Care Respiratory Society UK/Macmillan Publishers Limited

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