Mental Disorders in Danish Hospital Registers: A Review of Content and Possibilities for Epidemiological Research

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Danish national hospital registers are a rich source of data for psychiatric epidemiology. The potential to identify diagnosed mental disorders in the Danish population has resulted in a plethora of important research studies. However, no recent review of these research sources exists.

OBJECTIVE: To review the content, data quality and epidemiological considerations regarding mental disorders in the Danish hospital registers.

METHODS: We provide information on the setting, history, and data access regarding mental disorders in the Danish hospital registers (defined according to the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, F group Mental and behavioural disorder codes). We describe the registration of mental disorders over time in the Danish hospital registers, by providing counts of individuals diagnosed with mental disorders each year, by types of mental disorders, diagnosis, hospital contact, and contact unit. We also provide information on considerations when using these data sources, including data quality. For this, we searched PubMed to identify validation studies of coding of mental disorder diagnoses.

RESULTS: Between 1969 and 2022, 1,136,280 individuals (10.7% of all individuals who resided in Denmark in this period) have been registered as having a mental disorder as a primary or secondary diagnosis in a psychiatric unit in Denmark at least once. The type of contact and unit diagnoses were made in varied by mental disorder type. The literature indicates that a large proportion of coded diagnoses in the Danish hospital registers of mental disorders were considered valid.

CONCLUSION: We provide an overview of the available data for investigating mental disorders in the Danish hospital registers. We raise awareness of the limitations researchers should be aware of when using this data and discuss their implications. Careful consideration should be given to these during study design and when reporting findings from register-based studies on diagnosed mental disorders.

Original languageEnglish
JournalClinical epidemiology
Volume17
Pages (from-to)387-407
Number of pages21
ISSN1179-1349
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2025

Keywords

  • epidemiological methods
  • mental disorders registries
  • research design
  • validation studies

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