HEALTHCARE COST AND UTLIZATION PROJECT HCUP
A FEDERAL-STATE-INDUSTRY PARTNERSHIP IN HEALTH DATA
Sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
These pages provide only an introduction to the NIS package. For full documentation and notification of changes, visit the HCUP User Support Website at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov. |
Issued June 2007
Updated November 2015
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP)
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E-mail: hcup@ahrq.gov
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Index of Tables
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HCUP NATIONWIDE INPATIENT SAMPLE ( NIS)
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WHAT’S NEW IN THE 2005
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HEALTHCARE COST AND UTILIZATION PROJECT HCUP
A FEDERAL-STATE-INDUSTRY PARTNERSHIP IN HEALTH DATA
Sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and
the staff of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) thank users for
purchasing the HCUP National Inpatient Sample (NIS).
HCUP National Inpatient Sample (NIS)
The Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) is part of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), formerly the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research.
The NIS is a database of hospital inpatient stays. Researchers and policy makers use the NIS to identify, track, and analyze national trends in healthcare utilization, access, charges, quality, and outcomes.
The NIS is the largest all-payer inpatient care database that is publicly available in the United States, containing data from 5 to 8 million hospital stays from about 1,000 hospitals sampled to approximate a 20-percent stratified sample of U.S. community hospitals. The NIS is available for an 18-year time period, from 1988 to 2005, allowing analysis of trends over time. (Analyses of time trends are recommended from 1993 forward. See the report, Using the HCUP Nationwide Inpatient Sample to Estimate Trends, available on the HCUP User Support (HCUP-US) Website for details.)
The NIS is the only national hospital database with charge information on all patients, regardless of payer, including persons covered by Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance, and the uninsured. The NIS' large sample size enables analyses of rare conditions, such as congenital anomalies; uncommon treatments, such as organ transplantation; and special patient populations, such as the uninsured.
Inpatient stay records in the NIS include clinical and resource use information typically available from discharge abstracts. Hospital and discharge weights are provided for producing national estimates. The NIS can be linked to hospital-level data from the American Hospital Association's Annual Survey Database and county-level data from the Bureau of Health Professions' Area Resource File, except in those states that do not allow the release of hospital identifiers.
Beginning in 1998, the NIS differs from previous NIS releases: some data elements were dropped; some were added; for some data elements, the coding was changed; and the sampling and weighting strategy was revised to improve the representativeness of the data. (See the report, Changes in the NIS Sampling and Weighting Strategy for 1998, which describes these changes, available on the HCUP-US Website.)
Access to the NIS is open to users who sign data use agreements. Uses are limited to research and aggregate statistical reporting.
For more information on the NIS, please visit the AHRQ-sponsored HCUP-US Website at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov.
The Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) contains all-payer data on hospital inpatient stays from states participating in the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP). Each year of the NIS provides information on approximately 5 million to 8 million inpatient stays from about 1,000 hospitals. All discharges from sampled hospitals are included in the NIS database.
The NIS contains patient-level clinical and resource use information included in a typical discharge abstract. The NIS can be linked directly to hospital-level data from the American Hospital Association (AHA) Annual Survey Database and to county-level data from the Health Resources and Services Administration Bureau of Health Professions’ Area Resource File (ARF), except in those states that do not allow the release of hospital identifiers.
The NIS is designed to approximate a 20-percent sample of U.S. community hospitals, defined by the AHA to be "all non-Federal, short-term, general, and other specialty hospitals, excluding hospital units of institutions." Included among community hospitals are specialty hospitals such as obstetrics-gynecology, ear-nose-throat, short-term rehabilitation, orthopedic, and pediatric institutions. Also included are public hospitals and academic medical centers. Excluded are short-term rehabilitation hospitals (beginning with 1998 data), long-term hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, and alcoholism/chemical dependency treatment facilities.
This universe of U.S. community hospitals is divided into strata using five hospital characteristics: ownership/control, bed size, teaching status, urban/rural location, and U.S. region.
The NIS is a stratified probability sample of hospitals in the frame, with sampling probabilities proportional to the number of U.S. community hospitals in each stratum. The frame is limited by the availability of inpatient data from the data sources.
In order to improve the representativeness of the NIS, the sampling and weighting strategy was modified beginning with the 1998 data. The full description of this process can be found in the special report on Changes in NIS Sampling and Weighting Strategy for 1998. This report is available on the AHRQ-sponsored HCUP-US Website at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov. To facilitate the production of national estimates, both hospital and discharge weights are provided, along with information necessary to calculate the variance of estimates. Detailed information on the design of the NIS is available in the year-specific special reports on Design of the Nationwide Inpatient Sample found on the HCUP-US Website.
NIS data sets are currently available for multiple years, as shown in Table 1. Each release of the NIS includes:
Data from | Media/format options | Structure of Releases |
---|---|---|
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On CD-ROM, in ASCII format |
5 years of data in a 6-CD set, compressed files Two 10% subsamples of discharges for each year |
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On CD-ROM, in ASCII format | 1 year of data in a 2-CD set, compressed files Two 10% subsamples of discharges for each year |
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On CD-ROM, in ASCII format | 1 year of data in a 2-CD set,compressed files Two 10% subsamples of discharges for each year A companion file with four different sets of severity measures |
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On CD-ROM, in ASCII format | 1 year of data in a 2-CD set, compressed files
A companion file with four different sets of severity measures. |
Table 2 summarizes the data sources, number of hospitals, and number of unweighted and weighted inpatient stays in NIS data.
Year | Data sources | Number of hospitals | Number of discharges in the NIS, unweighted |
Number of discharges in the NIS, weighted for national estimates |
---|---|---|---|---|
1988 | CA CO FL IL IA MA NJ WA | 759 | 5,265,756 | 35,171,448 |
1989 | AZ CA CO FL IL IA MA NJ PA WA WI (Added AZ, PA, WI) |
882 | 6,110,064 | 35,104,645 |
1990 | AZ CA CO FL IL IA MA NJ PA WA WI (No change) |
871 | 6,268,515 | 35,215,397 |
1991 | AZ CA CO FL IL IA MA NJ PA WA WI (No change) |
859 | 6,156,188 | 35,036,492 |
1992 | AZ CA CO FL IL IA MA NJ PA WA WI
(No change) |
856 | 6,195,744 | 35,011,385 |
1993 | AZ CA CO CT FL IL IA KS MD MA NJ NY OR PA SC WA WI (Added CT, KS, MD, NY, OR, SC) |
913 | 6,538,976 | 34,714,530 |
1994 | AZ CA CO CT FL IL IA KS MD MA NJ NY OR PA SC WA WI (No change) |
904 | 6,385,011 | 34,622,203 |
1995 | AZ CA CO CT FL IL IA KS MD MA MO NJ NY OR PA SC TN WA WI (Added MO, TN) |
938 | 6,714,935 | 34,791,998 |
1996 | AZ CA CO CT FL IL IA KS MD MA MO NJ NY OR PA SC TN WA WI (No change) |
906 | 6,542,069 | 34,874,386 |
1997 | AZ CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IA KS MD MA MO NJ NY OR PA SC TN UT WA WI (Added GA, HI, UT) |
1,012 | 7,148,420 | 35,408,207 |
1998 | AZ CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IA KS MD MA MO NJ NY OR PA SC TN UT WA WI (No change) |
984 | 6,827,350 | 34,874,001 |
1999 | AZ CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IA KS MD MA ME MO NJ NY OR PA SC TN UT VA WA WI (Added ME, VA) |
984 | 7,198,929 | 35,467,673 |
2000 | AZ CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IA KS KY MD MA ME MO NC NJ NY OR PA SC TN TX UT VA WA WI WV (Added KY, NC, TX, WV) |
994 | 7,450,992 | 36,417,565 |
2001 | AZ CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IA KS KY MD MA ME MI MN MO NC NE NJ NY OR PA RI SC TN TX UT VA VT WA WI WV (Added MI, MN, NE, RI, VT) |
986 | 7,452,727 |
37,187,641 |
2002 | CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IA KS KY MD MA ME MI MN MO NC NE NJ NY NV OH OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VA VT WA WI WV (Added NV, OH, SD; AZ data were not available) |
995 | 7,853,982 |
37,804,021 |
2003 | AZ CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IN IA KS KY MD MA MI MN MO NC NE NH NJ NY NV OH OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VA VT WA WI WV (Added AZ, IN, NH; ME data were not available) |
994 | 7,977,728 | 38,220,659 |
2004 | AR AZ CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IN IA KS
KY MD MA MI MN MO NC NE NH NJ NY NV OH OR RI SC SD TN TX UT VA VT WA WI WV
(Added AR; PA data were not available) |
1,004 | 8,004,571 | 38,661,786 |
2005 | AR AZ CA CO CT FL GA HI IL IN IA KS
KY MD MA MI MN MO NC NE NH NJ NY NV OH OK OR RI SC SD TN TX UT VT WA WI WV
(Added OK; VA data were not available) |
1,054 | 7,995,048 | 39,163,834 |
Some data sources that contributed data to the NIS imposed restrictions on the release of certain data elements or on the number and types of hospitals that could be included in the database. Because of confidentiality laws, some data sources were prohibited from providing HCUP with discharge records that indicated specific medical conditions, such as HIV/AIDS or behavioral health. Detailed information on these state-specific restrictions is available in the report, Sources of NIS Data and State-Specific Restrictions, located on the HCUP-US Website (http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov).
The CD-ROM set contains two CD-ROMs that include fixed-width ASCII formatted data files and a README.TXT file describing how to access related NIS documentation on the HCUP-US Website (http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov).
CD-ROM #1 contains:
CD-ROM #2 contains:
On the HCUP-US Website (http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov), NIS purchasers can access complete file documentation, including variable notes, file layouts, summary statistics, and related technical reports. Similarly, purchasers can also download SAS, SPSS, and Stata load programs. Available online documentation and supporting files are detailed in Table 8.
All releases of the NIS contain two types of data: inpatient stay records and hospital information with weights. Table 3 and Table 4 (on the following pages) identify the data elements that can be found in the Inpatient Core and Hospital Weights files, respectively. Table 5 identifies the data elements in the Disease Severity Measures files. Table 6 identifies the data elements in the Diagnosis and Procedure Groups files.
Not all data elements in the NIS are uniformly coded or available across all states. The following tables are not complete documentation for the data. Please refer to the NIS documentation located on the HCUP-US Website (http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov) for comprehensive information about data elements and the files.
Type of Data Element |
HCUP Variable Name |
Years Available | Coding Notes | Unavailable in 2005 for: |
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Admission day of week or weekend | AWEEKEND | 1998-2005 | Admission on weekend: (0) admission on Monday-Friday, (1) admission on Saturday-Sunday | |
ADAYWK | 1988-1997 | Admission day of week: (1) Sunday, (2) Monday, (3) Tuesday, (4) Wednesday, etc. | ||
Admission month | AMONTH | 1988-2005 | Admission month coded from (1) January to (12) December | FL |
Admission source | ASOURCE | 1988-2005 | Admission source, uniform coding: (1) ER, (2) another hospital, (3) another facility including long-term care, (4) court/law enforcement, (5) routine/birth/other | |
ASOURCE_X | 1998-2005 | Admission source, as received from data source using State-specific coding | ||
ASOURCEUB92 | 2003-2005 | Admission source (UB-92 standard coding). For newborn admissions (ATYPE = 4): (1) normal delivery, (2) premature delivery, (3) sick baby, (4) extramural birth; For non-newborn admissions (ATYPE NE 4): (1) physician referral, (2) clinic referral, (3) HMO referral, (4) transfer from a hospital, (5) transfer from a skilled nursing facility, (6) transfer from a another healthcare facility, (7) emergency room, (8) court/law enforcement, (A) transfer from a critical access hospital | ||
Admission type | ATYPE | 1988-2005 | Admission type, uniform coding: (1) emergency, (2) urgent, (3) elective, (4) newborn, (5) trauma center beginning in 2003 data, (6) other | CA |
ELECTIVE | 2002-2005 | Indicates elective admission: (1) elective, (0) non-elective admission | ||
Age at admission | AGE | 1988-2005 | Age in years coded 0-124 years | |
AGEDAY | 1988-2005 | Age in days coded 0-365 only when the age in years is less than 1 | FL, MA, NH, SC | |
Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) category | DXCCS1 - DXCCS15 | 1998-2005 | CCS category for all diagnoses for NIS beginning in 1998 | |
DCCHPR1 | 1988-1997 | CCS category for principal diagnosis for NIS prior to 1998. CCS was formerly called the Clinical Classifications for Health Policy Research (CCHPR) | ||
PRCCS1 - PRCCS15 | 1998-2005 | CCS category for all procedures for NIS beginning in 1998 | ||
PCCHPR1 | 1988-1997 | CCS category for principal procedure for NIS prior to 1998. CCS was formerly called the Clinical Classifications for Health Policy Research (CCHPR) | ||
Data source information | DSNUM | 1988-1997 | Data source number | |
DSTYPE | 1988-1997 | Data source type: (1) State data organization, (2) Hospital association, (3) Consortia | ||
Diagnosis information | DX1 - DX15 | 1988-2005 | Diagnoses, principal and secondary (ICD-9-CM). Beginning in 2003, the diagnosis array does not include any of external cause of injury codes. These codes have been stored in a separate array ECODEn. | |
NDX | 1988-2005 | Number of diagnoses coded on the original record | ||
DSNDX | 1988-1997 | Number of diagnosis fields provided by the data source | ||
DXSYS | 1988-1997 | Diagnosis system (ICD-9-CM) | ||
DXV1 - DXV15 | 1988-1997 | Diagnosis validity flags | ||
Diagnosis Related Group (DRG) | DRG | 1988-2005 | DRG in use on discharge date | |
DRGVER | 1988-2005 | Grouper version in use on discharge date | ||
DRG10 | 1988-1999 | DRG Version 10 (effective October 1992 - September 1993) | ||
DRG18 | 1998-2005 | DRG Version 18 (effective October 2000 - September 2001) | ||
Discharge quarter | DQTR | 1988-2005 | Coded: (1) Jan - Mar, (2) Apr - Jun, (3) Jul - Sep, (4) Oct - Dec | |
Discharge weights (Weights for 1988-1993 are on Hospital Weights file) |
DISCWT | 1998-2005 | Discharge weight on Core file and Hospital Weights file for NIS beginning in 1998. In all data years except 2000, this weight is used to create national estimates for all analyses. In 2000 only, this weight is used to create national estimates for all analyses excluding those that involve total charges. | |
DISCWT_U | 1993-1997 | Discharge weight on Core file and Hospital Weights file for NIS prior to 1998 | ||
DISCWTcharge | 2000 | Discharge weight for national estimates of total charges. In 2000 only, this weight is used to create national estimates for analyses that involve total charges | ||
DISCWT10 | 1998-2005 | Discharge weight on 10% subsample Core file for NIS beginning in 1998. In all data years except 2000, this weight is used to create national estimates for all analyses. In 2000 only, this weight is used to create national estimates for all analyses excluding those that involve total charges | ||
D10CWT_U | 1993-1997 | Discharge weight on 10% subsample Core file for NIS prior to 1998 | ||
DISCWTcharge10 | 2000 | Discharge weight for national estimates of total charges on 10% subsample file. In 2000 only, this weight is used to create national estimates for analyses that involve total charges | ||
Discharge year | YEAR | 1988-2005 | ||
Disposition of patient (discharge status) | DISP | 1988-1997 | Disposition of patient, uniform coding used prior to 1998: (1) routine, (2) short-term hospital, (3) skilled nursing facility, (4) intermediate care facility, (5) another type of facility, (6) home healthcare, (7) against medical advice, (20) died | |
DIED | 1988-2005 | Indicates in-hospital death: (0) did not die during hospitalization, (1) died during hospitalization | ||
DISPUB92 | 1998-2005 | Disposition of patient, UB-92 coding: (1) routine, (2) short term hospital, (3) skilled nursing facility, (4) intermediate care, (5) another type of facility, (6) home healthcare, (7) against medical advice, (8) home IV provider, (20) died in hospital, (40) died at home, (41) died in a medical facility, (42) died, place unknown, (43) Federal health facility beginning in 2003 data, (50) Hospice, home, (51) Hospice, medical facility, (61) hospital-based Medicare approved swing bed beginning in 2000 data, (62) another rehabilitation facility beginning in 2001 data, (63) long term care hospital beginning in 2001 data, (64) certified nursing facility beginning in 2002 data, (65) psychiatric hospital beginning in 2004 (71) another institution for outpatient services beginning in 2000 data, (72) this institution for outpatient services beginning in 2000 data, (99) discharged alive, destination unknown beginning in 2001 data | CA, IN, MD | |
DISPUNIFORM | 1998-2005 | Disposition of patient, uniform coding used beginning in 1998: (1) routine, (2) transfer to short term hospital, (5) other transfers, including skilled nursing facility, intermediate care, and another type of facility, (6) home healthcare, (7) against medical advice, (20) died in hospital, (99) discharged alive, destination unknown | ||
External causes of injury and poisoning | ECODE1 - ECODE4 | 2003-2005 | External cause of injury and poisoning code, primary and secondary (ICD-9-CM). Beginning in 2003, external cause of injury codes are stored in a separate array ECODEn from the diagnosis codes in the array DXn. Prior to 2003, these codes are contained in the diagnosis array (DXn). | |
E_CCS1 - E_CCS4 | 2003-2005 | CCS category for the external cause of injury and poisoning codes | ||
NECODE | 2003-2005 | Number of external cause of injury codes on the original record. A maximum of 4 codes are retained on the NIS. | ||
Gender of patient | FEMALE | 1998-2005 | Indicates gender for NIS beginning in 1998: (0) male, (1) female | |
SEX | 1988-1997 | Indicates gender for NIS prior to 1998: (1) male, (2) female | ||
Hospital information | DSHOSPID | 1988-2005 | Hospital number as received from the data source | GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX |
HOSPID | 1988-2005 | HCUP hospital number (links to Hospital Weights file) | ||
HOSPST | 1988-2005 | State postal code for the hospital (e.g., AZ for Arizona) | ||
HOSPSTCO | 1988-2002 | Modified Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) State/county code for the hospital links to Area Resource File (available from the Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resources and Services Administration) Beginning in 2003, this data element is available only on the hospital file. | ||
NIS_STRATUM | 1998-2005 | Stratum used to sample hospitals, based on geographic region, control, location/teaching status, and bed size. Stratum information is also in the Hospital Weights file. | ||
Length of Stay | LOS | 1988-2005 | Length of stay, edited | |
LOS_X | 1988-2005 | Length of stay, as received from data source | ||
Location of the patient | PL_UR_CAT4 | 2003-2005 | Urban–rural designation for patient’s county of residence: (1) large metropolitan, (2) small metropolitan, (3) micropolitan, (4) non-core | |
Major Diagnosis Category (MDC) | MDC | 1988-2005 | MDC in use on discharge date | |
MDC10 | 1988-1999 | MDC Version 10 (effective October 1992 - September 1993) | ||
MDC18 | 1998-2005 | MDC Version 18 (effective October 2000 - September 2001) | ||
Median household income for patient's ZIP Code | ZIPINC_QRTL | 2003-2005 | Median household income quartiles for patient's ZIP Code. For 2004, the median income quartiles are defined as: $1 - $35,999; $36,000 - $44,999; $45,000 - $58,999; and $59,000 or more. | |
ZIPINC | 1998-2002 | Median household income category in files beginning in 1998: (1) $1-$24,999, (2) $25,000-$34,999, (3) $35,000-$44,999, (4) $45,000 and above | ||
ZIPINC4 | 1988-1997 | Median household income category in files prior to 1998: (1) $1-$25,000, (2) $25,001-$30,000, (3) $30,001-$35,000, (4) $35,001 and above | ||
ZIPINC8 | 1988-1997 | Median household income category in files prior to 1998: (1) $1-$15,000, (2) $15,001-$20,000, (3) $20,001-$25,000, (4) $25,001-$30,000, (5) $30,001-$35,000, (6) $35,001-$40,000, (7) $40,001-$45,000, (8) $45,001 or more | ||
Neonatal/ maternal flag | NEOMAT | 1988-2005 | Assigned from diagnoses and procedure codes: (0) not maternal or neonatal, (1) maternal diagnosis or procedure, (2) neonatal diagnosis, (3) maternal and neonatal on same record | |
Payer information | PAY1 | 1988-2005 | Expected primary payer, uniform: (1) Medicare, (2) Medicaid, (3) private including HMO, (4) self-pay, (5) no charge, (6) other | |
PAY1_N | 1988-1997 | Expected primary payer, nonuniform: (1) Medicare, (2) Medicaid, (3) Blue Cross, Blue Cross PPO, (4) commercial, PPO, (5) HMO, PHP, etc., (6) self-pay, (7) no charge, (8) Title V, (9) Worker's Compensation, (10) CHAMPUS, CHAMPVA, (11) other government, (12) other | ||
PAY1_X | 1998-2005 | Expected primary payer, as received from the data source | ||
PAY2 | 1988-2005 | Expected secondary payer, uniform: (1) Medicare, (2) Medicaid, (3) private including HMO, (4) self-pay, (5) no charge, (6) other | AZ, CA, CO, FL, HI, IA, NH, OH, OK, RI, SD | |
PAY2_N | 1988-1997 | Expected secondary payer, nonuniform: (1) Medicare, (2) Medicaid, (3) Blue Cross, Blue Cross PPO, (4) commercial, PPO, (5) HMO, PHP, etc., (6) self-pay, (7) no charge, (8) Title V, (9) Worker's Compensation, (10) CHAMPUS, CHAMPVA, (11) other government, (12) other | ||
PAY2_X | 1998-2005 | Expected secondary payer, as received from the data source | AZ, CA, CO, FL, HI, IA, NH, OH, OK, RI, SD | |
Physician identifiers, synthetic |
MDID_S | 1988-2000 | Synthetic attending physician number in files prior to 2001 | |
MDNUM1_R | 2003-2005 | Re-identified attending physician number in files starting in 2003 | CA, CT, GA, HI, IL, IN, MA, NC, OH, OK, UT, VT, WI, WV | |
MDNUM1_S | 2001-2002 | Synthetic attending physician number in files beginning in 2001 and discontinued in 2003 | ||
SURGID_S | 1988-2000 | Synthetic secondary physician number in files prior to 2001 | ||
MDNUM2_R | 2003-2005 | Re-identified secondary physician number in files starting in 2003 | CA, CT, GA, HI, IL, IN, MA, NC, OH, VT, WI, WV | |
MDNUM2_S | 2001-2002 | Synthetic secondary physician number in files beginning in 2001 and discontinued in 2003 | ||
Procedure information | PR1 - PR15 | 1988-2005 | Procedures, principal and secondary (ICD-9-CM) | |
NPR | 1988-2005 | Number of procedures coded on the original record | ||
DSNPR | 1988-1997 | Number of procedure fields in this data source | ||
PRSYS | 1988-1997 | Procedure system (ICD-9-CM) | ||
PRV1 -PRV15 | 1988-1997 | Procedure validity flag | ||
PRDAY1 | 1988-2005 | Number of days from admission to principal procedure. | IL, OH, OK, UT, WA, WV | |
PRDAY2 - PRDAY15 | 1998-2005 | Number of days from admission to secondary procedures. | IL, OH, OK, UT, WA, WV | |
Race of Patient | RACE | 1988-2005 | Race, uniform coding: (1) white, (2) black, (3) Hispanic, (4) Asian or Pacific Islander, (5) Native American, (6) other | GA, IL, KY, MN, NV, OH, OR, WA, WV |
Record identifier, synthetic | KEY | 1998-2005 | Unique record number for file beginning in 1998 | |
SEQ | 1988-1997 | Unique record number for NIS prior to 1998 | ||
SEQ_SID | 1988-1997 | Unique record number for NIS prior to 1998 | ||
PROCESS | 1988-1997 | Processing number for NIS prior to 1998 | ||
Total Charges | TOTCHG | 1988-2005 | Total charges, edited | |
TOTCHG_X | 1988-2005 | Total charges, as received from data source |
Type of Data Element |
HCUP Variable Name |
Years Available | Coding Notes | Unavailable in 2005 for: |
---|---|---|---|---|
Discharge counts | N_DISC_U | 1988-2005 | Number of AHA universe discharges in the stratum | |
S_DISC_U | 1988-2005 | Number of sampled discharges in the sampling stratum (NIS_STRATUM or STRATUM) | ||
S_DISC_S | 1988-1997 | Number of sampled discharges in the stratum STRAT_ST | ||
N_DISC_F | 1988-1997 | Number of frame discharges in the stratum | ||
N_DISC_S | 1988-1997 | Number of State's discharges in the stratum | ||
TOTAL_DISC | 1998-2005 | Total number of discharges from this hospital in the NIS | ||
TOTDSCHG | 1988-1997 | Total number of discharges from this hospital in the NIS | ||
Discharge weights | DISCWT | 1998-2005 | Discharge weight used in the NIS beginning in 1998. In all data years except 2000, this weight is used to create national estimates for all analyses. In 2000 only, this weight is used to create national estimates for all analyses excluding those that involve total charges. | |
DISCWT_U | 1988-1997 | Discharge weights used in the NIS prior to 1998. | ||
DISCWT_F | 1988-1997 | Discharge weights to the sample frame are available only in 1988-1997 | ||
DISCWT_S | 1988-1997 | Discharge weights to the State are available only in 1988-1997 | ||
DISCWTcharge | 2000 | Discharge weight for national estimates of total charges for 2000 only. | ||
Discharge Year | YEAR | 1988-2005 | Discharge year | |
Hospital counts | N_HOSP_F | 1988-1997 | Number of frame hospitals in the stratum | |
N_HOSP_S | 1988-1997 | Number of State's hospitals in the stratum | ||
N_HOSP_U | 1988-2005 | Number of AHA universe hospitals in the stratum | ||
S_HOSP_S | 1988-1997 | Number of sampled hospitals in STRAT_ST | ||
S_HOSP_U | 1988-2005 | Number of sampled hospitals in the stratum (NIS_STRATUM or STRATUM) | ||
Hospital identifiers | HOSPID | 1988-2005 | HCUP hospital number (links to inpatient Core files) | |
AHAID | 1988-2005 | AHA hospital identifier that matches AHA Annual Survey of Hospitals (not available for all states) | GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX | |
IDNUMBER | 1988-2005 | AHA hospital identifier without the leading 6 (not available for all states) | GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX | |
HOSPNAME | 1993-2005 | Hospital name from AHA Annual Survey of Hospitals (not available for all states) | AR, GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, SC, SD, TN, TX | |
Hospital location | HOSPADDR | 1993-2004 | Hospital address from AHA Annual Survey of Hospitals (not available for all states) | AR, GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX |
HOSPCITY | 1993-2005 | Hospital city from AHA Annual Survey of Hospitals (not available for all states) | AR, GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX | |
HOSPST | 1988-2004 | Hospital state postal code for hospital (e.g., AZ for Arizona) | ||
HOSPSTCO | 2002-2005 | Modified Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) State/county code | GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX | |
HFIPSSTCO | 2005 | Unmodified Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) State/county code for the hospital. Links to the Area Resource File (available from the Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resources and Services Administration) | GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX | |
HOSPZIP | 1993-2005 | Hospital ZIP Code from AHA Annual Survey of Hospitals (not available for all states) | AR, GA, HI, IN, KS, MI, NE, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX | |
Hospital characteristics | HOSP_BEDSIZE | 1998-2005 | Bed size of hospital: (1) small, (2) medium, (3) large | |
H_BEDSZ | 1993-1997 | Bed size of hospital: (1) small, (2) medium, (3) large | ||
ST_BEDSZ | 1988-1992 | Bed size of hospital: (1) small, (2) medium, (3) large | ||
HOSP_CONTROL | 1998-2005 | Control/ownership of hospital: (0) government or private, collapsed category, (1) government, nonfederal, public, (2) private, non-profit, voluntary, (3) private, invest-own, (4) private, collapsed category | ||
H_CONTRL | 1993-1997 | Control/ownership of hospital: (1) government, nonfederal (2) private, non-profit (3) private, invest-own | ||
ST_OWNER | 1988-1992 | Control/ownership of hospital: (1) public (2) private, non-profit (3) private for profit | ||
HOSP_LOCATION | 1998-2005 | Location: (0) rural, (1) urban | ||
H_LOC | 1993-1997 | Location: (0) rural, (1) urban | ||
HOSP_LOCTEACH | 1998-2005 | Location/teaching status of hospital: (1) rural, (2) urban non-teaching, (3) urban teaching | ||
H_LOCTCH | 1993-1997 | Location/teaching status of hospital: (1) rural, (2) urban non-teaching, (3) urban teaching | ||
LOCTEACH | 1988-1992 | Location/teaching status of hospital: (1) rural, (2) urban non-teaching, (3) urban teaching | ||
HOSP_REGION | 1998-2005 | Region of hospital: (1) Northeast, (2) Midwest, (3) South, (4) West | ||
H_REGION | 1993-1997 | Region of hospital: (1) Northeast, (2) Midwest, (3) South, (4) West | ||
ST_REG | 1988-1992 | Region of hospital: (1) Northeast, (2) Midwest, (3) South, (4) West | ||
HOSP_TEACH | 1998-2005 | Teaching status of hospital: (0) non-teaching, (1) teaching | ||
H_TCH | 1993-1997 | Teaching status of hospital: (0) non-teaching, (1) teaching | ||
NIS_STRATUM | 1998-2005 | Stratum used to sample hospitals beginning in 1998; includes geographic region, control, location/teaching status, and bed size | ||
STRATUM | 1988-1997 | Stratum used to sample hospitals prior to 1998; includes geographic region, control, location/teaching status, and bed size | ||
STRAT_ST | 1988-1997 | Stratum for State-specific weights | ||
Hospital weights | HOSPWT | 1998-2005 | Weight to hospitals in AHA universe (i.e., total U.S.) beginning in 1998 | |
HOSPWT_U | 1988-1997 | Weight to hospitals in AHA universe (i.e., total U.S.) prior to 1998 | ||
HOSPWT_F | 1988-1997 | Weight to hospitals in the sample frame. | ||
HOSPWT_S | 1988-1997 | Weight to hospitals in the State |
Type of Data Element |
HCUP Variable Name |
Years Available | Coding Notes |
---|---|---|---|
AHRQ Comorbidity Software (AHRQ) | CM_AIDS | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Acquired immune deficiency syndrome |
CM_ALCOHOL | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Alcohol abuse | |
CM_ANEMDEF | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Deficiency anemias | |
CM_ARTH | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Rheumatoid arthritis/collagen vascular diseases | |
CM_BLDLOSS | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Chronic blood loss anemia | |
CM_CHF | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Congestive heart failure | |
CM_CHRNLUNG | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Chronic pulmonary disease | |
CM_COAG | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Coagulopathy | |
CM_DEPRESS | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Depression | |
CM_DM | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Diabetes, uncomplicated | |
CM_DMCX | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Diabetes with chronic complications | |
CM_DRUG | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Drug abuse | |
CM_HTN_C | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Hypertension, uncomplicated and complicated | |
CM_HYPOTHY | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Hypothyroidism | |
CM_LIVER | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Liver disease | |
CM_LYMPH | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Lymphoma | |
CM_LYTES | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Fluid and electrolyte disorders | |
CM_METS | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Metastatic cancer | |
CM_NEURO | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Other neurological disorders | |
CM_OBESE | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Obesity | |
CM_PARA | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Paralysis | |
CM_PERIVASC | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Peripheral vascular disorders | |
CM_PSYCH | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Psychoses | |
CM_PULMCIRC | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Pulmonary circulation disorders | |
CM_RENLFAIL | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Renal failure | |
CM_TUMOR | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Solid tumor without metastasis | |
CM_ULCER | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Peptic ulcer disease excluding bleeding | |
CM_VALVE | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Valvular disease | |
CM_WGHTLOSS | 2002-2005 | AHRQ comorbidity measure: Weight loss | |
All Patient Refined DRG (3M) | APRDRG | 2002-2005 | All Patient Refined DRG |
APRDRG_Risk_Mortality | 2002-2005 | All Patient Refined DRG: Risk of Mortality Subclass | |
APRDRG_Severity | 2002-2005 | All Patient Refined DRG: Severity of Illness Subclass | |
All-Payer Severity-adjusted DRG (HSS, Inc.) | APSDRG | 2002-2005 | All-Payer Severity-adjusted DRG |
APSDRG_Mortality_Weight | 2002-2005 | All-Payer Severity-adjusted DRG: Mortality Weight | |
APSDRG_LOS_Weight | 2002-2005 | All-Payer Severity-adjusted DRG: Length of Stay Weight | |
APSDRG_Charge_Weight | 2002-2005 | All-Payer Severity-adjusted DRG: Charge Weight | |
Disease Staging (Medstat) | DS_DX_Category1 | 2002-2005 | Disease Staging: Principal Disease Category |
DS_Stage1 | 2002-2005 | Disease Staging: Stage of Principal Disease Category | |
DS_LOS_Level | 2002-2005 | Disease Staging: Length of Stay Level | |
DS_LOS_Scale | 2002-2005 | Disease Staging: Length of Stay Scale | |
DS_Mrt_Level | 2002-2005 | Disease Staging: Mortality Level | |
DS_Mrt_Scale | 2002-2005 | Disease Staging: Mortality Scale | |
DS_RD_Level | 2002-2005 | Disease Staging: Resource Demand Level | |
DS_RD_Scale | 2002-2005 | Disease Staging: Resource Demand Scale | |
Linkage Variables | HOSPID | 2002-2005 | HCUP hospital identification number |
KEY | 2002-2005 | HCUP record identifier |
Type of Data Element |
HCUP Variable Name |
Years Available | Coding Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Clinical Classifications Software category for Mental Health and Substance Abuse (CCS-MHSA) | CCSMGN1 — CCSMGN15 | 2005 | CCS-MHSA general category for all diagnoses |
CCSMSP1 — CCSMSP15 | 2005 | CCS-MHSA specific category for all diagnoses | |
ECCSMGN1 — ECCSMGN4 | 2005 | CCS-MHSA general category for all external cause of injury codes | |
Chronic Condition Indicator | CHRON1 — CHRON15 | 2005 | Chronic condition indicator for all diagnoses: (0) non-chronic condition, (1) chronic condition |
CHRONB1 — CHRONB15 | 2005 | Chronic condition indicator body system for all diagnoses: (1) Infectious and parasitic disease, (2) Neoplasms, (3) Endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases and immunity disorders, (4) Diseases of blood and blood-forming organs, (5) Mental disorders, (6) Diseases of the nervous system and sense organs, (7) Diseases of the circulatory system, (8) Diseases of the respiratory system, (9) Diseases of the digestive system, (10) Diseases of the genitourinary system, (11) Complications of pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium, (12) Diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissue, (13) Diseases of the musculoskeletal system, (14) Congenital anomalies, (15) Certain conditions originating in the perinatal period, (16) Symptoms, signs, and ill-defined conditions, (17) Injury and poisoning, (18) Factors influencing health status and contact with health services | |
Procedure Class | PCLASS1 — PCLASS15 | 2005 | Procedure Class for all procedures: (1) Minor Diagnostic, (2) Minor Therapeutic, (3) Major Diagnostic, (4) Major Therapeutic |
Linkage Variables | HOSPID | 2002-2005 | HCUP hospital identification number |
KEY | 2002-2005 | HCUP record identifier |
The hospital universe is defined by all hospitals that were open during any part of each calendar year and were designated as community hospitals in the AHA Annual Survey Database.
For more information on how hospitals in the data set were mapped to hospitals as defined by the AHA, refer to the special report, HCUP Hospital Identifiers. For a list of all data sources, refer to Sources of NIS Data and State-Specific Restrictions. For more detailed descriptions of the sampling design, refer to the year-specific special reports, Design of the HCUP Nationwide Inpatient Sample. All reports can be found on the NIS Database Documentation portion of the HCUP-US Website.
To help ensure generalizability, five hospital sampling strata were defined based on hospital characteristics contained in the AHA Annual Survey Database. The stratification variables are:
Location and Teaching Status | Hospital Bed size | ||
---|---|---|---|
Small | Medium | Large | |
NORTHEAST | |||
Rural | 1-49 | 50-99 | 100+ |
Urban,non-teaching | 1-124 | 125-199 | 200+ |
Urban, teaching | 1-249 | 250-424 | 425+ |
MIDWEST | |||
Rural | 1-29 | 30-49 | 50+ |
Urban, non-teaching | 1-74 | 75-174 | 175+ |
Urban, teaching | 1-249 | 250-374 | 375+ |
SOUTH | |||
Rural | 1-39 | 40-74 | 75+ |
Urban, non-teaching | 1-99 | 100-199 | 200+ |
Urban, teaching | 1-249 | 250-449 | 450+ |
WEST | |||
Rural | 1-24 | 25-44 | 45+ |
Urban, non-teaching | 1-99 | 100-174 | 175+ |
Urban, teaching | 1-199 | 200-324 | 325+ |
To further ensure geographic representativeness, implicit stratification variables included state and three-digit ZIP Code (the first three digits of the hospital’s five-digit ZIP Code). The hospitals were sorted according to these variables prior to systematic random sampling. For more detailed descriptions of the stratification and sample design, refer to the year-specific special reports, Design of the HCUP Nationwide Inpatient Sample, which can be found on the HCUP-US Website.
The NIS data files are provided on CD-ROMs. The NIS Inpatient Core and Hospital Weights files are on CD-ROM #1, while the Disease Severity Measures and Diagnosis and Procedure Groups files are on CD-ROM #2. Comprehensive documentation for the NIS files is available on the HCUP User Support (HCUP-US) Website (http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov).
In order to load and analyze the NIS data onto your PC, you will need 12 gigabytes of space available. Because of the size of the files, the data are distributed as self-extracting PKZIP compressed files. To decompress the data, you should follow these steps:
The ASCII data files will then be uncompressed into this directory. After the files are uncompressed, the *.exe files can be deleted.
NIS documentation files on the HCUP-US Website (http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov) provide important resources for the user. Refer to these resources to understand the structure and content of the NIS and to aid in using the database.
Table 8 details both the NIS related reports and the comprehensive NIS database documentation available on HCUP-US.
This section provides a brief synopsis of special considerations when using the NIS. For more details, refer to the comprehensive documentation on the HCUP-US Website (http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov).
NIS Year | Name of Discharge Weight on the Core File to Use for Creating Nationwide Estimates | Name of Discharge Weight on the 10% Subsample Core File to Use for Creating Nationwide Estimates |
---|---|---|
2005 |
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2001 - 2004 |
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2000 |
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1998 - 1999 |
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1988 - 1997 |
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AHRQ strongly advises researchers against using the NIS to estimate State-specific statistics. Prior to 2012, State is available as a NIS data element. However, these NIS samples were not designed to yield a representative sample of hospitals at the State level. AHRQ recommends that researchers employ the SID for State-level estimates.
Each NIS sample is drawn from the sampling frame consisting of discharge data submitted by HCUP Partners-statewide data organizations that agree to participate in the NIS. Data from non-Partner States are missing completely from the sampling frame, and data from Partner States are sometimes incomplete because of different State reporting requirements, different State restrictions, or other data omissions. The NIS is designed to represent hospitals and discharges nationally, including those outside the sampling frame.
To accomplish this, within each hospital sampling stratum the NIS draws a number of hospitals from the sampling frame required to net a total of 20 percent of hospitals nationally. The sampling strata are defined by census region (4 regions), hospital ownership (3 categories), urban-rural location, teaching status, and bed size (3 categories). As a result, the proportion of NIS hospitals in a stratum that are from a given State is unlikely to equal the State's actual proportion of hospitals in that stratum. Consequently, the sample of NIS hospitals is unlikely to be representative of hospitals in the State, and the NIS sample weights will not be appropriate at the State level.
The level of this "misrepresentation" varies across the States in any given year of the NIS, which further confounds State-to-State comparisons on the basis of State-specific estimates from the NIS. Moreover, for a given State the level of misrepresentation changes from year to year as States (and hospitals) enter and exit the sampling frame over time. This further confounds State-specific trends on the basis of State-specific estimates from the NIS.
Finally, because the NIS was not designed to be representative at the State level, design-based estimates of standard errors are not possible, which severely hampers State-level inferences. Moreover, the NIS is composed of all discharges from a sample of hospitals (a cluster sample). The hospital-to-hospital variation and the small number of hospitals available in the NIS for many States make Statelevel estimates very imprecise at best and biased at worst.
The collection and reporting of external cause of injury (E codes) varies greatly across states. Some states have laws or mandates for the collection of E codes; others do not. Some states do not require hospitals to report E codes in the range E870-E879 - "misadventures to patients during surgical and medical care" - which means that these occurrences will be underreported. Be sure to read the state-specific notes on diagnoses for more details; this information can be found on the Description of Data Elements page on the HCUP-US Website (http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/db/nation/nis/nisdde.jsp).
Information on HCUP products and services is available on the AHRQ-sponsored HCUP User Support Website at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov
For more information on all HCUP databases, visit the HCUP-US Website at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov or contact the HCUP Central Distributor (detailed below).
Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) is a nationwide database of hospital inpatient stays. The NIS is the largest all-payer inpatient care database that is publicly available in the United States, containing data from 5 to 8 million hospital stays from about 1,000 hospitals sampled to approximate a 20-percent stratified sample of U.S. community hospitals. The NIS has been available since 1988. For trends analysis, it is recommended that analyses begin with the 1993 data year.
State Inpatient Databases (SID) are hospital inpatient databases from Data Organizations participating in HCUP. The SID contain the universe of the inpatient discharge abstracts in the participating HCUP states, translated into a uniform format to facilitate multi-State comparisons and analyses.
State Ambulatory Surgery Databases (SASD) are outpatient databases from Data Organizations in participating HCUP States; these databases capture surgeries performed on the same day in which patients are admitted and released. The SASD contain the ambulatory surgery encounter abstracts in participating States, translated into a uniform format to facilitate multi-state comparisons and analyses. All of the databases include abstracts from hospital-affiliated ambulatory surgery sites. Some contain the universe of ambulatory surgery encounter abstracts for that state, including records from both hospital-affiliated and freestanding surgery centers. Composition and completeness of data files may vary from state to state.
The State Emergency Department Databases (SEDD) include data on all emergency department visits that do not result in an admission from Data Organizations in participating HCUP states that provide ED data. Information on patients initially seen in the emergency room and then admitted to the hospital is included in the SID. All of the databases include abstracts from hospital-affiliated emergency department sites. Composition and completeness of data files may vary from state to state.
Kids' Inpatient Database (KID) is a unique database of hospital inpatient stays for children. The KID has been produced every three years since 1997 and was specifically designed to permit researchers to study a broad range of conditions and procedures related to child health issues.
HCUP databases are available for purchase through the AHRQ-sponsored HCUP Central Distributor. All years of the NIS and KID are released through the HCUP Central Distributor. In addition, many of the HCUP State Partners allow the public release of the HCUP SID, SASD, and SEDD through the HCUP Central Distributor. Application Kits for purchasing the HCUP databases are available online at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov or by contacting the HCUP Central Distributor directly. Information on how to obtain uniformly-formatted HCUP files from states not participating in the HCUP Central Distributor is also available from the HCUP Central Distributor:
HCUP Central Distributor
Phone: (866) 556-4287 (toll-free)
FAX: (866) 792-5313
E-mail: HCUPDistributor@ahrq.gov
HCUP User Support (HCUP-US) provides technical assistance to all HCUP users and is designed to facilitate the use of HCUP data, software tools, and products. The goals of this service are to increase awareness of the strengths and uses of HCUP data and to enhance the skills of individuals using the data for research, education, and policy analysis. A user-friendly Website for HCUP-US is located at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov. This site includes links to information on how to purchase and understand the HCUP databases, as well as links to HCUP User Support Services and an index of HCUP topics. For further information, consultants are available via both telephone and e-mail to help in planning analytic research and to offer advice about appropriate uses of HCUP data.
HCUPnet is a Web-based query tool for identifying, tracking, analyzing, and comparing statistics on hospitals at the national, regional, and state level. HCUPnet offers easy access to national statistics and trends and selected state statistics about hospital stays. This tool provides step by step guidance, helping researchers to quickly obtain the statistics they need. HCUPnet generates statistics using the NIS, KID, and SID for those states that have agreed to participate. In addition, HCUPnet provides Quick Statistics — ready-to-use tables on commonly requested information — as well as national statistics based on the AHRQ Quality Indicators. HCUPnet can be found at: https://datatools.ahrq.gov/hcupnet.
AHRQ Quality Indicators (QIs) are clinical performance measures for use with readily available inpatient data. Methods and software for the AHRQ Quality Indicators can be downloaded from http://www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov.
The following tools can all be found at the HCUP User Support Website, Tools and Software page, at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/tools_software.jsp. Methods and software related to these products can be downloaded from the same Web page.
Clinical Classifications Software (CCS), formerly known as the Clinical Classifications for Health Policy Research (CCHPRs), are classification systems that group ICD-9-CM (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification) diagnoses and procedures into a limited number of clinically meaningful categories. CCS is also available for ICD-10 diagnoses, Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) and HCPCS procedures, in addition to mental health and substance abuse-related ICD-9-CM diagnoses.
Comorbidity Software assigns variables that identify comorbidities in hospital discharge records using ICD 9 CM diagnosis codes.
Procedure Classes identify whether a procedure is (a) diagnostic or therapeutic, and (b) minor or major in terms of invasiveness and/or resource use.
Cost-to-Charge Ratio (CCR) Files are hospital-level files designed to supplement the data elements in the NIS and SID databases.
Chronic Condition Indicator provides users an easy way to categorize ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes into one of two categories: chronic or not chronic. The tool can also assign ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes into 1 of 18 body system categories.
Utilization Flags reveal additional information about use of healthcare services by combining information from UB-92 revenue codes and ICD-9-CM procedure codes to create flags, or indicators, of utilization. Use of procedures and services such as ICU, CCU, NICU, and specific diagnostic tests and therapies can be assessed with these Utilization Flags.
Publications using HCUP data or describing methods for using HCUP data can be found at: http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports.jsp.
HCUP Fact Books report aggregate statistics and detailed analyses using HCUP data. The Fact Books can be viewed online or can be requested from the AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse at (800) 358 9295. You can also send a postcard requesting these reports by writing to: AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse, P.O. Box 8547, Silver Spring, MD 20907.
HCUP Statistical Briefs are Web-based reports that present simple, descriptive statistics on a variety of focused topics such as hospital admissions through the emergency department, hospitalizations among the uninsured, women and heart disease, hospital stays associated with alcohol abuse, and racial and ethnic disparities in potentially preventable hospitalizations.
HCUP Methods Series features a broad array of methodological reports on the HCUP databases and software tools. Topics range from how to use the NIS for reporting trends, how to properly calculate variance estimates using the NIS, an evaluation of linking patients across hospital stays in the SID, evaluations of HCUP emergency department and ambulatory surgery data, an evaluation of E code reporting across the HCUP States, and creation of utilization flags based on UB-92 revenue codes.
HCUP Database Reports are specific to the design and use of the HCUP databases. These reports include descriptions of the design of each database, comparisons of HCUP data with other data sources, evaluations of data quality, and descriptions of database composition.
Search for Publications based on data or products from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/pubsearch/pubsearch.jsp.
Internet Citation: 2005 Introduction to the NIS. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP). July 2016. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/db/nation/nis/NIS_Introduction_2005.jsp. |
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