OBJECTIVE: Linkage of longitudinal administrative data for mothers and babies supports research and service evaluation in several populations around the world. We established a linked mother-baby cohort using pseudonymised, population-level data for England. DESIGN AND SETTING: Retrospective linkage study using electronic hospital records of mothers and babies admitted to NHS hospitals in England, captured in Hospital Episode Statistics between April 2001 and March 2013. RESULTS: Of 672,955 baby records in 2012/13, 280,470 (42%) linked deterministically to a maternal record using hospital, GP practice, maternal age, birthweight, gestation, birth order and sex. A further 380,164 (56%) records linked using probabilistic methods incorporating ...
BACKGROUND: Research using linked routine population-based data collected for non-research purposes ...
BACKGROUND: Improving maternal and newborn health requires improvements in the quality of facility-b...
Introduction A file’s overall linkage rate may hide significant bias in unlinked records. Newborns, ...
Objective Linkage of longitudinal administrative data for mothers and babies supports research an...
Linkage of longitudinal administrative data for mothers and babies supports research and service eva...
Objectives The objectives of this study were to describe the methods used to assess the quality of l...
INTRODUCTION: Maternity Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data for 2005-2014 were linked to birth re...
Maternity Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data for 2007 were linked to birth registration and NHS ...
Background: This work formed part of a project to link data recorded routinely at birth in England a...
© 2019 The Authors. Background: In longitudinal health research, combining the richness of cohort da...
Abstract Background Administrative healthcare claims databases are used in drug safety research but ...
Maternity Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data were linked to birth registration and NHS Numbers f...
Linking routinely collected healthcare administrative data is a valuable method for conducting resea...
Linking routinely collected healthcare administrative data is a valuable method for conducting resea...
BACKGROUND: National birth cohorts derived from administrative health databases constitute unique re...
BACKGROUND: Research using linked routine population-based data collected for non-research purposes ...
BACKGROUND: Improving maternal and newborn health requires improvements in the quality of facility-b...
Introduction A file’s overall linkage rate may hide significant bias in unlinked records. Newborns, ...
Objective Linkage of longitudinal administrative data for mothers and babies supports research an...
Linkage of longitudinal administrative data for mothers and babies supports research and service eva...
Objectives The objectives of this study were to describe the methods used to assess the quality of l...
INTRODUCTION: Maternity Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data for 2005-2014 were linked to birth re...
Maternity Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data for 2007 were linked to birth registration and NHS ...
Background: This work formed part of a project to link data recorded routinely at birth in England a...
© 2019 The Authors. Background: In longitudinal health research, combining the richness of cohort da...
Abstract Background Administrative healthcare claims databases are used in drug safety research but ...
Maternity Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data were linked to birth registration and NHS Numbers f...
Linking routinely collected healthcare administrative data is a valuable method for conducting resea...
Linking routinely collected healthcare administrative data is a valuable method for conducting resea...
BACKGROUND: National birth cohorts derived from administrative health databases constitute unique re...
BACKGROUND: Research using linked routine population-based data collected for non-research purposes ...
BACKGROUND: Improving maternal and newborn health requires improvements in the quality of facility-b...
Introduction A file’s overall linkage rate may hide significant bias in unlinked records. Newborns, ...