Background: The British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) is the first long-running UK longitudinal survey with a non-medical focus and a sample covering the whole age range to have asked for permission to link to a range of administrative health records. This study determines whether informed consent led to selection bias and reflects on the value of the BHPS linked with health records for epidemiological research. Methods. Multivariate logistical regression is used, with whether the respondent gave consent to data linkage or not as the dependent variable. Independent variables were entered as four blocks; (i) a set of standard demographics likely to be found in most health registration data, (ii) a broader set of socio-economic characteristic...
ABSTRACT Objectives The aim of this project is to address important issues relevant to children’s...
ABSTRACT Background Electronic administrative data exist in several domains which, if linked, are...
INTRODUCTION: Non-random selection into a study population due to differences between consent...
Background: A number of cohort studies and longitudinal household panel studies in Great Britain hav...
This study constitutes the first longitudinal exploration of consent to link survey and administrati...
Ethical guidelines in the United Kingdom require written consent from participants in epidemiologic ...
© 2019 The Authors. Background: In longitudinal health research, combining the richness of cohort da...
[[abstract]]Background: Linking computerized health insurance records with routinely collected surve...
Objective: To assess consent to record linkage, describe the characteristics of consenters and compa...
Linking survey responses with administrative data is a promising practice to increase the range of r...
Objective: To assess consent to record linkage, describe the characteristics of consenters and compa...
Background Linking survey data to administrative records requires informed participant consent. W...
Background Record linkage is a useful tool for health research. Potential benefits aside, its use ra...
In the United Kingdom, in order to link individual-level administrative records to survey responses...
We analyse patterns of consent and consent bias in the context of a large general household survey, ...
ABSTRACT Objectives The aim of this project is to address important issues relevant to children’s...
ABSTRACT Background Electronic administrative data exist in several domains which, if linked, are...
INTRODUCTION: Non-random selection into a study population due to differences between consent...
Background: A number of cohort studies and longitudinal household panel studies in Great Britain hav...
This study constitutes the first longitudinal exploration of consent to link survey and administrati...
Ethical guidelines in the United Kingdom require written consent from participants in epidemiologic ...
© 2019 The Authors. Background: In longitudinal health research, combining the richness of cohort da...
[[abstract]]Background: Linking computerized health insurance records with routinely collected surve...
Objective: To assess consent to record linkage, describe the characteristics of consenters and compa...
Linking survey responses with administrative data is a promising practice to increase the range of r...
Objective: To assess consent to record linkage, describe the characteristics of consenters and compa...
Background Linking survey data to administrative records requires informed participant consent. W...
Background Record linkage is a useful tool for health research. Potential benefits aside, its use ra...
In the United Kingdom, in order to link individual-level administrative records to survey responses...
We analyse patterns of consent and consent bias in the context of a large general household survey, ...
ABSTRACT Objectives The aim of this project is to address important issues relevant to children’s...
ABSTRACT Background Electronic administrative data exist in several domains which, if linked, are...
INTRODUCTION: Non-random selection into a study population due to differences between consent...