How good is New South Wales admitted patient data collection in recording births?

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How good is New South Wales admitted patient data collection in recording births? is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1177/183335831104000302
P698PubMed publication ID22006432

P2093author name stringMary K Lam
P2860cites workMaternal age and fetal loss: population based register linkage studyQ24656936
How useful are hospital morbidity data for monitoring conditions occurring in the perinatal period?Q30983521
Characteristics of unmatched maternal and baby records in linked birth records and hospital discharge dataQ31050661
The accuracy of reporting of the hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in population health dataQ31171224
Research use of linked health data--a best practice protocolQ32169932
The accuracy of population health data for monitoring trends and outcomes among women with diabetes in pregnancyQ33329020
How accurate is the reporting of obstetric haemorrhage in hospital discharge data? A validation studyQ33387008
Monitoring the quality of maternity care: how well are labour and delivery events reported in population health data?Q33401670
Cross-sectional reporting of previous Cesarean birth was validated using longitudinal linked dataQ33516298
Identification of Aboriginal infants at an urban hospitalQ39808125
An evaluation of the quality of obstetric morbidity coding using an objective assessment tool, the Performance Indicators For Coding Quality (PICQ).Q48589196
P433issue3
P921main subjectdata collectionQ4929239
P304page(s)12-19
P577publication date2011-01-01
P1433published inHealth Information Management JournalQ15751302
P1476titleHow good is New South Wales admitted patient data collection in recording births?
P478volume40

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cites work (P2860)
Q33628036Length of stay for mental and behavioural disorders postpartum in primiparous mothers: a cohort study
Q31108622Preparing linked population data for research: cohort study of prisoner perinatal health outcomes
Q52632217The effect of medical and operative birth interventions on child health outcomes in the first 28 days and up to 5 years of age: A linked data population-based cohort study.

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