Background: Clinical databases are increasingly used for health research; many of them capture information on common health indicators including height, weight, blood pressure, cholesterol level, smoking status, and alcohol consumption. However, these are often not recorded on a regular basis; missing data are ubiquitous. We described the recording of health indicators in UK primary care and evaluated key implications for handling missing data. Methods: We examined the recording of health indicators in The Health Improvement Network (THIN) UK primary care database over time, by demographic variables (age and sex) and chronic diseases (diabetes, myocardial infarction, and stroke). Using weight as an example, we fitted linear and logistic reg...
The potential to use data on family history of premature disease to assess disease risk is increasin...
Targeted cardiovascular disease prevention relies on risk-factor information held in primary care re...
<strong>Background</strong> Although the majority of patient contact within the UK's National Health...
Background: Clinical databases are increasingly used for health research; many of them capture infor...
Background: Clinical databases are increasingly used for health research; many of them capture infor...
Irene Petersen,1,2 Catherine A Welch,3 Irwin Nazareth,1 Kate Walters,1 Louise Marston,1 Richard W Mo...
PURPOSE: Missing data are a substantial problem in clinical databases. This paper aims to examine pa...
BACKGROUND:Excess weight and unexpected weight loss are associated with multiple disease states and ...
In contrast to secondary care, where handwritten records remain widespread, electronic patient recor...
The use of primary care databases has been integral in pharmacoepidemiological studies and pharmacov...
<strong>Introduction</strong> The degree of generalisability of patient databases to the general pop...
Aims: The electronic Health Indicator Data (eHID) project aims to investigate how routinely collecte...
Background. The quality of recording of clinical data in diabetes care in general practices is very ...
The potential to use data on family history of premature disease to assess disease risk is increasin...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVE: Quality indicators for the treatment of type 2 diabetes are...
The potential to use data on family history of premature disease to assess disease risk is increasin...
Targeted cardiovascular disease prevention relies on risk-factor information held in primary care re...
<strong>Background</strong> Although the majority of patient contact within the UK's National Health...
Background: Clinical databases are increasingly used for health research; many of them capture infor...
Background: Clinical databases are increasingly used for health research; many of them capture infor...
Irene Petersen,1,2 Catherine A Welch,3 Irwin Nazareth,1 Kate Walters,1 Louise Marston,1 Richard W Mo...
PURPOSE: Missing data are a substantial problem in clinical databases. This paper aims to examine pa...
BACKGROUND:Excess weight and unexpected weight loss are associated with multiple disease states and ...
In contrast to secondary care, where handwritten records remain widespread, electronic patient recor...
The use of primary care databases has been integral in pharmacoepidemiological studies and pharmacov...
<strong>Introduction</strong> The degree of generalisability of patient databases to the general pop...
Aims: The electronic Health Indicator Data (eHID) project aims to investigate how routinely collecte...
Background. The quality of recording of clinical data in diabetes care in general practices is very ...
The potential to use data on family history of premature disease to assess disease risk is increasin...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVE: Quality indicators for the treatment of type 2 diabetes are...
The potential to use data on family history of premature disease to assess disease risk is increasin...
Targeted cardiovascular disease prevention relies on risk-factor information held in primary care re...
<strong>Background</strong> Although the majority of patient contact within the UK's National Health...