Registry data for cross-country comparisons of migrants' healthcare utilization in the EU: a survey study of availability and content

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Registry data for cross-country comparisons of migrants' healthcare utilization in the EU: a survey study of availability and content. / Nielsen, Signe Smith; Krasnik, Allan; Rosano, Aldo.

In: BMC Health Services Research, Vol. 9, 2009, p. 210.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Nielsen, SS, Krasnik, A & Rosano, A 2009, 'Registry data for cross-country comparisons of migrants' healthcare utilization in the EU: a survey study of availability and content', BMC Health Services Research, vol. 9, pp. 210. <http://www.biomedcentral.com.ep.fjernadgang.kb.dk/1472-6963/9/210>

APA

Nielsen, S. S., Krasnik, A., & Rosano, A. (2009). Registry data for cross-country comparisons of migrants' healthcare utilization in the EU: a survey study of availability and content. BMC Health Services Research, 9, 210. http://www.biomedcentral.com.ep.fjernadgang.kb.dk/1472-6963/9/210

Vancouver

Nielsen SS, Krasnik A, Rosano A. Registry data for cross-country comparisons of migrants' healthcare utilization in the EU: a survey study of availability and content. BMC Health Services Research. 2009;9:210.

Author

Nielsen, Signe Smith ; Krasnik, Allan ; Rosano, Aldo. / Registry data for cross-country comparisons of migrants' healthcare utilization in the EU: a survey study of availability and content. In: BMC Health Services Research. 2009 ; Vol. 9. pp. 210.

Bibtex

@article{8011f1f0d47711dea1f3000ea68e967b,
title = "Registry data for cross-country comparisons of migrants' healthcare utilization in the EU: a survey study of availability and content",
abstract = "BackgroundCross-national comparable data on migrants{\textquoteright} use of healthcare services are important to address problems in access to healthcare; to identify high risk groups for prevention efforts; and to evaluate healthcare systems comparatively. Some of the main obstacles limiting analyses of health care utilization are lack of sufficient coverage and availability of reliable and valid healthcare data which includes information allowing for identification of migrants. The objective of this paper was to reveal which registry data on healthcare utilization were available in the EU countries in which migrants can be identified; and to determine to what extent data were comparable between the EU countries.MethodsA questionnaire survey on availability of healthcare utilization registries in which migrants can be identified was carried out among all national statistic agencies and other relevant national health authorities in the 27 EU countries in 2008-9 as part of the Migrant and Ethnic Minority Health Observatory-project (MEHO). The information received was compared with information from a general survey on availability of survey and registry data on migrants conducted by Agency of Public Health, Lazio Region, Italy within the MEHO-project; thus, the information on registries was double-checked to assure accuracy and verification.ResultsAvailable registry data on healthcare utilization which allow for identification on migrants on a national/regional basis were only reported in 11 EU countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, and Sweden. Data on hospital care, including surgical procedures, were most frequently available whereas only few countries had data on care outside the hospital. Regarding identification of migrants, five countries reported having information on both citizenship and country of birth, one reported availability of information on country of birth, and five countries reported availability of information on citizenship. ConclusionsLack of registry data in 16 EU countries, shortage of data on healthcare utilization, and the diversity in the definition of migrant status hampers cross-national comparisons and calls for an urgent establishment of registries, expansion of the existing registry information, and adoption of a common, generally acceptable definition and identification method of migrants across the EU.",
keywords = "Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, register data, international comparisons, Europe, migrants, identification, utilization",
author = "Nielsen, {Signe Smith} and Allan Krasnik and Aldo Rosano",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "210",
journal = "BMC Health Services Research",
issn = "1472-6963",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Registry data for cross-country comparisons of migrants' healthcare utilization in the EU: a survey study of availability and content

AU - Nielsen, Signe Smith

AU - Krasnik, Allan

AU - Rosano, Aldo

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - BackgroundCross-national comparable data on migrants’ use of healthcare services are important to address problems in access to healthcare; to identify high risk groups for prevention efforts; and to evaluate healthcare systems comparatively. Some of the main obstacles limiting analyses of health care utilization are lack of sufficient coverage and availability of reliable and valid healthcare data which includes information allowing for identification of migrants. The objective of this paper was to reveal which registry data on healthcare utilization were available in the EU countries in which migrants can be identified; and to determine to what extent data were comparable between the EU countries.MethodsA questionnaire survey on availability of healthcare utilization registries in which migrants can be identified was carried out among all national statistic agencies and other relevant national health authorities in the 27 EU countries in 2008-9 as part of the Migrant and Ethnic Minority Health Observatory-project (MEHO). The information received was compared with information from a general survey on availability of survey and registry data on migrants conducted by Agency of Public Health, Lazio Region, Italy within the MEHO-project; thus, the information on registries was double-checked to assure accuracy and verification.ResultsAvailable registry data on healthcare utilization which allow for identification on migrants on a national/regional basis were only reported in 11 EU countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, and Sweden. Data on hospital care, including surgical procedures, were most frequently available whereas only few countries had data on care outside the hospital. Regarding identification of migrants, five countries reported having information on both citizenship and country of birth, one reported availability of information on country of birth, and five countries reported availability of information on citizenship. ConclusionsLack of registry data in 16 EU countries, shortage of data on healthcare utilization, and the diversity in the definition of migrant status hampers cross-national comparisons and calls for an urgent establishment of registries, expansion of the existing registry information, and adoption of a common, generally acceptable definition and identification method of migrants across the EU.

AB - BackgroundCross-national comparable data on migrants’ use of healthcare services are important to address problems in access to healthcare; to identify high risk groups for prevention efforts; and to evaluate healthcare systems comparatively. Some of the main obstacles limiting analyses of health care utilization are lack of sufficient coverage and availability of reliable and valid healthcare data which includes information allowing for identification of migrants. The objective of this paper was to reveal which registry data on healthcare utilization were available in the EU countries in which migrants can be identified; and to determine to what extent data were comparable between the EU countries.MethodsA questionnaire survey on availability of healthcare utilization registries in which migrants can be identified was carried out among all national statistic agencies and other relevant national health authorities in the 27 EU countries in 2008-9 as part of the Migrant and Ethnic Minority Health Observatory-project (MEHO). The information received was compared with information from a general survey on availability of survey and registry data on migrants conducted by Agency of Public Health, Lazio Region, Italy within the MEHO-project; thus, the information on registries was double-checked to assure accuracy and verification.ResultsAvailable registry data on healthcare utilization which allow for identification on migrants on a national/regional basis were only reported in 11 EU countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, and Sweden. Data on hospital care, including surgical procedures, were most frequently available whereas only few countries had data on care outside the hospital. Regarding identification of migrants, five countries reported having information on both citizenship and country of birth, one reported availability of information on country of birth, and five countries reported availability of information on citizenship. ConclusionsLack of registry data in 16 EU countries, shortage of data on healthcare utilization, and the diversity in the definition of migrant status hampers cross-national comparisons and calls for an urgent establishment of registries, expansion of the existing registry information, and adoption of a common, generally acceptable definition and identification method of migrants across the EU.

KW - Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences

KW - register data

KW - international comparisons

KW - Europe

KW - migrants

KW - identification

KW - utilization

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

SP - 210

JO - BMC Health Services Research

JF - BMC Health Services Research

SN - 1472-6963

ER -

ID: 15894899