Background: A number of cohort studies and longitudinal household panel studies in Great Britain have asked for consent to link survey data to administrative health data. We explore commonalities and differences in the process of collecting consent, achieved consent rates and biases in consent with respect to socio-demographic, socio-economic and health characteristics. We hypothesise that British cohort studies which are rooted within the health sciences achieve higher consent rates than the UK household longitudinal studies which are rooted within the social sciences. By contrast, the lack of a specific health focus in household panel studies means there may be less selectivity in consent, in particular, with respect to health characteris...
Linking survey and administrative data offers the possibility of combining the strengths, and mitiga...
AIM: The study aimed to establish the level of selection bias that may occur should individual patie...
ABSTRACT Objectives To compare sample biases when linking education data to external datasets usi...
Background: The British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) is the first long-running UK longitudinal surv...
This study constitutes the first longitudinal exploration of consent to link survey and administrati...
Linking survey responses with administrative data is a promising practice to increase the range of r...
Background Linking survey data to administrative records requires informed participant consent. W...
© 2019 The Authors. Background: In longitudinal health research, combining the richness of cohort da...
Ethical guidelines in the United Kingdom require written consent from participants in epidemiologic ...
[[abstract]]Background: Linking computerized health insurance records with routinely collected surve...
OBJECTIVE: The study sought to explore the consent rate and associated potential bias across a cohor...
INTRODUCTION: Non-random selection into a study population due to differences between consenters and...
Introduction: Nonrandom selection into a study population due to differences between consenters and ...
We analyse patterns of consent and consent bias in the context of a large general household survey, ...
Surveys increasingly request respondents' consent to link survey responses with administrative recor...
Linking survey and administrative data offers the possibility of combining the strengths, and mitiga...
AIM: The study aimed to establish the level of selection bias that may occur should individual patie...
ABSTRACT Objectives To compare sample biases when linking education data to external datasets usi...
Background: The British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) is the first long-running UK longitudinal surv...
This study constitutes the first longitudinal exploration of consent to link survey and administrati...
Linking survey responses with administrative data is a promising practice to increase the range of r...
Background Linking survey data to administrative records requires informed participant consent. W...
© 2019 The Authors. Background: In longitudinal health research, combining the richness of cohort da...
Ethical guidelines in the United Kingdom require written consent from participants in epidemiologic ...
[[abstract]]Background: Linking computerized health insurance records with routinely collected surve...
OBJECTIVE: The study sought to explore the consent rate and associated potential bias across a cohor...
INTRODUCTION: Non-random selection into a study population due to differences between consenters and...
Introduction: Nonrandom selection into a study population due to differences between consenters and ...
We analyse patterns of consent and consent bias in the context of a large general household survey, ...
Surveys increasingly request respondents' consent to link survey responses with administrative recor...
Linking survey and administrative data offers the possibility of combining the strengths, and mitiga...
AIM: The study aimed to establish the level of selection bias that may occur should individual patie...
ABSTRACT Objectives To compare sample biases when linking education data to external datasets usi...