Use of name recognition software, census data and multiple imputation to predict missing data on ethnicity: application to cancer registry records.

Ronan Ryan, S Vernon, G Lawrence, S Wilson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

28 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

UNLABELLED ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND Information on ethnicity is commonly used by health services and researchers to plan services, ensure equality of access, and for epidemiological studies. In common with other important demographic and clinical data it is often incompletely recorded. This paper presents a method for imputing missing data on the ethnicity of cancer patients, developed for a regional cancer registry in the UK. METHODS Routine records from cancer screening services, name recognition software (Nam Pehchan and Onomap), 2001 national Census data, and multiple imputation were used to predict the ethnicity of the 23% of cases that were still missing following linkage with self-reported ethnicity from inpatient hospital records. RESULTS The name recognition software were good predictors of ethnicity for South Asian cancer cases when compared with data on ethnicity derived from hospital inpatient records, especially when combined (sensitivity 90.5%; specificity 99.9%; PPV 93.3%). Onomap was a poor predictor of ethnicity for other minority ethnic groups (sensitivity 4.4% for Black cases and 0.0% for Chinese/Other ethnic groups). Area-based data derived from the national Census was also a poor predictor non-White ethnicity (sensitivity: South Asian 7.4%; Black 2.3%; Chinese/Other 0.0%; Mixed 0.0%). CONCLUSIONS Currently, neither method for assigning individuals to an ethnic group (name recognition and ethnic distribution of area of residence) performs well across all ethnic groups. We recommend further development of name recognition applications and the identification of additional methods for predicting ethnicity to improve their precision and accuracy for comparisons of health outcomes. However, real improvements can only come from better recording of ethnicity by health services.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3
Number of pages1
JournalBMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making
Volume12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2012

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Use of name recognition software, census data and multiple imputation to predict missing data on ethnicity: application to cancer registry records.'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this