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The problem with using computer programmes to assign ethnicity: immigration decreases sensitivity.

L J Brant1, E Boxall

  • 1Immunization Department, Health Protection Agency, Centre for Infections, 61 Colindale Avenue, London NW95EQ, UK. lisa.brant@hpa.org.uk

Public Health
|April 7, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The NamPehchan tool misclassifies nearly 50% of Black African women as South Asian, impacting ethnic health surveillance accuracy. This highlights the need for caution when using name-based ethnicity assignment for diverse populations.

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Area of Science:

  • Public Health
  • Epidemiology
  • Health Informatics

Background:

  • Ethnic group is crucial for understanding disease patterns but often unavailable in surveillance.
  • Automated ethnicity assignment tools like NamPehchan have variable accuracy.
  • Recent observations suggested NamPehchan's performance decline, particularly for Black African individuals.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate the current sensitivity and positive predictive value (PPV) of the NamPehchan program.
  • To assess changes in NamPehchan's accuracy over time.
  • To investigate the impact of changing demographics on ethnicity classification.

Main Methods:

  • A cross-sectional study design was employed.
  • NamPehchan classified women's ethnicity based on name.
  • Classifications were compared against midwife-reported ethnicity (gold standard).
  • Sensitivity, PPV, and infection rates were calculated overall and by year.

Main Results:

  • 627 women with hepatitis B surface antigen positivity were analyzed.
  • The majority of positive cases were from minority ethnic groups, predominantly Asian.
  • Overall NamPehchan sensitivity was 74.5% and PPV was 68.5%.
  • A significant misclassification rate was observed, with nearly 50% of Black African women incorrectly identified as South Asian.

Conclusions:

  • Immigration patterns, particularly from African countries, have decreased NamPehchan's sensitivity for certain groups.
  • Misclassification is likely when NamPehchan is applied to populations including individuals from Muslim African regions.
  • Careful consideration and validation are necessary when utilizing name-based ethnicity tools in diverse populations for health surveillance.