Objectives Public health surveillance of diabetes during pregnancy is needed. Birth certificate and hospital discharge data are population-based,
routinely available and economical to obtain and analyze, but their quality has been criticized. It is important to understand
the usefulness and limitations of these data sources for surveillance of diabetes during pregnancy.
Methods We conducted a comprehensive literature review to summarize the validity of birth certificate and hospital discharge data
for identifying diabetes-complicated births.
Results Sensitivities for birth certificate data identifying prepregnancy diabetes mellitus (PDM) ranged from 47% to 52%, median
50% (kappas: min = 0.210, med = 0.497, max = 0.523). Sensitivities for birth certificate data identifying gestational diabetes
mellitus (GDM) ranged from 46% to 83%, median 65% (kappas: min = 0.545, med = 0.667, max = 0.828). Sensitivities for the two
studies using hospital discharge data for identifying PDM were 78% and 95% (kappas: 0.839 and 0.964), and for GDM were 71%
and 81% (kappas: 0.584 and 0.840). Specificities were consistently above 98% for both data sources.
Conclusions Overall, hospital discharge data performed better than birth certificates, marginally so for identifying GDM but substantially
so for identifying PDM. Reports based on either source alone should focus on trends and disparities and include the caveat
that results under represent the problem. Linking the two data sources may improve identification of both GDM and PDM cases.
Keywords Gestational diabetes mellitus - Prepregnancy diabetes mellitus - Surveillance - Birth certificates - Hospital discharge data