BreastScreen Australia data 2012-2013
Quality Statement Attributes
Identifying and definitional attributes | |
Metadata item type:![]() | Quality Statement |
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METEOR identifier:![]() | 569662 |
Registration status:![]() |
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Data quality | |
Quality statement summary:![]() | Summary of Key Issues Description BreastScreen Australia is Australia’s national, population-based breast cancer screening program and is a joint program of the Australian and state and territory governments. BreastScreen registers in each state and territory record data collected during a woman’s contact with a BreastScreen service. Some BreastScreen data are supplied as aggregate data and therefore cannot be interrogated in more detail. The majority of screening mammography performed in Australia is through BreastScreen Australia. However, a relatively small amount of screening mammography occurs through services other than BreastScreen Australia, which are not within the scope of these data. |
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Institutional environment:![]() | The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) is a major national agency set up by the Australian Government under the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Act 1987 to provide reliable, regular and relevant information and statistics on Australia's health and welfare. It is an independent statutory authority established in 1987, governed by a management Board, and accountable to the Australian Parliament through the Health and Ageing portfolio. |
Timeliness:![]() | BreastScreen data are available within about 6–12 months. (It can take up to 12 months for final pathology results on all breast tissue samples to be received by BreastScreen registers.) The BreastScreen Australia database cannot be fully compiled until the final jurisdiction supplies its data. Participation data for the previous calendar year are supplied in July each year; rescreening and invasive breast cancer and DCIS detection data for the previous calendar year are supplied July–December each year. (Rescreening and sensitivity data lag behind, as the specifications for these require a specified period of time to pass before they can be accurately calculated.) The current BreastScreen Australia database contains data on women who participated in BreastScreen Australia between 1996 and 2013. |
Accessibility:![]() | BreastScreen Australia data are published annually in the BreastScreen Australia monitoring report available on the AIHW website http://www.aihw.gov.au/breast-cancer-screening/where they can be downloaded without charge. Supplementary data tables presenting more detailed data accompany each report and these, too, are available on the AIHW website where they can be downloaded without charge. |
Interpretability:![]() | While many concepts in the BreastScreen Australia monitoring report are easy to interpret, other concepts and statistical calculations are more complex. All concepts are explained within the body of the report presenting these data, along with footnotes to provide further details and caveats. The appendixes provide additional detail on the data sources and classifications, and on the statistical methods used. |
Relevance:![]() | Breast cancer screening data are highly relevant for monitoring trends in breast screening participation and the detection of invasive breast cancer and DCIS, as well as other measures of program performance such as recall rates and sensitivity measures. The data are used for many purposes by policy makers and researchers, but are supplied and analysed specifically to monitor and inform BreastScreen Australia. |
Accuracy:![]() | All data provided by state and territory BreastScreen programs, once analysed, are supplied back for verification. Women attending a BreastScreen service are able to self-report Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status; this database field is therefore considered to be of high quality. However, use of the ‘not stated’ category has changed substantially over time, which makes trend data difficult to interpret. State and territory BreastScreen databases change every day, and not just because new records are added; existing records are changed if new, more precise information becomes available or if typographical errors are discovered by routine data checking procedures. As a result, the number of women participating, as well as DCIS and invasive breast cancer cases reported by the AIHW for any particular year may change slightly over time. Further data published by a jurisdictional BreastScreen program at a certain point in time may differ slightly from what is published by the AIHW at a different time. |
Coherence:![]() | BreastScreen data are reported and published annually by the AIHW. |
Data products | |
Implementation start date:![]() | 02/06/2014 |