National Healthcare Agreement: PI 09-Immunisation rates for vaccines in the national schedule (Australian Childhood Immunisation Register), 2011 QS
Data Quality Statement Attributes
Identifying and definitional attributes | |
Metadata item type: | Data Quality Statement |
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METEOR identifier: | 447906 |
Registration status: | Health, Superseded 04/12/2012 |
Data quality | |
Data quality statement summary: |
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Institutional environment: | The ACIR is administered and operated by Medicare Australia for the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA). Medicare Australia provides DoHA with quarterly coverage reports at the national and state level. Immunisations are notified to Medicare Australia by a range of immunisation providers including General Practitioners, Councils, Aboriginal Medical Services, State and Territory Health departments. For information on the institutional environment of the ACIR, including the legislative obligations of the ACIR, financing and governance arrangements, and mechanisms for scrutiny of ACIR operations, please see http://www.medicareaustralia.gov.au/public/services/acir/index.jsp. The tables for this indicator were prepared by Medicare Australia and quality-assessed by the Department of Health and Ageing and the AIHW. The Department of Health and Ageing drafted the initial data quality statement (including providing input about the methodology used to extract the data and any data anomalies) and then further comments were added by the AIHW, in consultation with the Department. The AIHW did not have the relevant datasets required to independently verify the data tables for this indicator. For further information see the AIHW website. |
Timeliness: | A minimum 3-month lag period is allowed for late notification of immunisations to the Register. Data have been presented for children born between 1 January 2005 and 31 March 2005. |
Accessibility: | Information contained within the indicator for disaggregations by Indigenous, SEIFA and Remoteness are not currently publicly accessible. Current total percentage and total numbers however can be viewed on Medicare Australia’s web site. Medicare Australia publishes current immunisation coverage from the ACIR on its web site, www.medicareaustralia.gov.au. Authorised immunisation providers can access detailed reports via a secured area of the Medicare Australia web site. Immunisation coverage data derived from the ACIR have been reported in Communicable Disease Intelligence since early 1998. Data for 3 key milestone ages (12 months, 24 months and 5 years (6 years prior to 2008)), nationally and by jurisdiction are published quarterly. |
Interpretability: | Further information on the ACIR can be found at: http://www.medicareaustralia.gov.au/public/services/acir/index.jsp. Information on the National Immunisation Program Schedule and vaccinations can be found at: |
Relevance: | The ACIR records details of vaccinations given to children under seven years of age who live in Australia, however reporting for the Australian Healthcare Agreement is only for those children aged five years, which for this report, are those children born between 1 January 2005 and 31 March 2005. The data reported here uses the ACIR definition of fully-immunised children for coverage reporting; that is, children who have received all age appropriate immunisations for Diphtheria, Tetanus, Pertussis, Hepatitis B, Poliomyelitis, Haemophilus influenzae type b, Measles, Mumps and Rubella. A child is assessed as fully immunised at five years of age (60 ≤ 63 months) if they have received age appropriate immunisations against diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio, measles, mumps and rubella. There are possible gaps in coverage due to unknown vaccination status of children less than 5 years migrating to Australia. The extent of this is not currently quantifiable. |
Accuracy: | Vaccination coverage rates calculated using ACIR data are believed to underestimate actual vaccination rates because of under-reporting by immunisation providers. However, the extent of any under-reporting has not been estimated. Programs, such as the General Practice Immunisation Incentive (GPII), and provider incentive payments have helped minimise under-reporting by providing a financial incentive to report clean and accurate data. The data contains minimal if any duplication of immunisations, as children are identified via their Medicare number. Approximately 99 per cent of children are registered with Medicare by 12 months of age. The ACIR covers virtually all children, particularly because participation in the ACIR is via an ‘opt-out’ arrangement. ACIR is considered to have high levels of Indigenous identification (estimated to be 95 per cent in 2005). Medicare Australia used tables and concordance files to construct rates by remoteness and socioeconomic status. |
Coherence: | The definitions of numerators and denominators have been consistent since the inception of the ACIR in 1996. |
Relational attributes | |
Related metadata references: | Supersedes National Healthcare Agreement: P09-Immunisation rates for vaccines in the national schedule (Australian Childhood Immunisation Register), 2010 QS Health, Superseded 08/06/2011 Has been superseded by National Healthcare Agreement: PI 09-Immunisation rates for vaccines in the national schedule (Australian Childhood Immunisation Register), 2012 QS Health, Retired 14/01/2015 |
Indicators linked to this Data Quality statement: |