4.0 Article

Establishing an Australian pediatric spinal cord disorder register using consumer, health professional, and researcher perspectives

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPINAL CORD MEDICINE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10790268.2022.2115513

Keywords

Pediatric spinal cord disorders; Epidemiology; National register; Minimum dataset

Funding

  1. SpineCare Foundation

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This study collected perspectives on the development of a national register for pediatric spinal cord disorders and developed a minimum dataset for an Australian register. It is recommended to link the pediatric register to an adult database to ensure coverage across the lifespan. Review and refinement of the minimum dataset are suggested to make it more practical for use.
Context/Objective Pediatric spinal cord disorders (SCD) are rare, and epidemiological data available to support treatment are lacking. The implementation of a national data register tailored to this population would greatly assist clinicians and therapists in guiding clinical practice. This study gathered perspectives surrounding a prospective national pediatric spinal cord disorder register. Design Survey and modified Delphi technique. Setting Australia. Participants SCD consumers, health professionals, and researchers. Interventions None. Outcome Measures None. Results Purposive sampling recruited 6 consumers and 52 health professionals and researchers working in the field of SCD to participate. The consumer survey contained items including demographic information, general and pediatric-specific SCD health issues, and questions regarding activity and participation. The modified Delphi survey required health professionals and researchers to identify which collection items and administrative features should be included in a national SCD register for both clinical and research purposes. Seventeen essential and nine optional items, two outcome measures, data collection methods, consumer access, definition of pediatric, and use of International Data Standards were included in the consensus for a minimum dataset. Conclusion This study developed a minimum dataset that could inform an Australian register for pediatric SCD. A register linking to an adult database is recommended to ensure coverage across the lifespan. While items for a minimum dataset have been recommended, this dataset is large. Review and refinement of this list are recommended to ensure the register is not overly time-consuming for practical use.

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