150 results on '"Harron K"'
Search Results
2. Evaluating data linkage techniques for the analysis of bloodstream infection in paediatric intensive care
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Harron, K., Wade, A., Gilbert, R., and Goldstein, H.
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618.92 - Abstract
Errors that occur during linkage of individual-level data from different sources can lead to substantial bias in analyses of linked data. This thesis aims to develop methods for handling linkage error, and to evaluate these methods in the context of using linked administrative data to support randomised controlled trials. Firstly, the thesis describes the process required for linkage of national data on paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admissions and bloodstream infection (BSI) surveillance (PICANet and LabBase2). I illustrate the complex steps required, from understanding the structure of the data to calculation of probabilistic match weights and evaluation of linkage quality. This provides a generalisable guide for linkage of administrative data in other contexts. Secondly, the thesis develops methods for handling uncertainty in linkage by extending the multiple imputation framework to the context of data linkage, using prior-informed imputation (PII). Comparison of results from traditional probabilistic linkage, standard multiple imputation and PII showed that PII minimised the bias associated with linkage of incomplete identifiers in PICANet and LabBase2. Finally, linked PICANet-LabBase2 data are used to assess the generalisability of results from a trial of standard versus impregnated central venous catheters (CVCs) in PICU. Trial results are not yet available. However assuming a relative risk of 0.06-0.44 for BSI using impregnated CVCs (based on a meta-analysis in adults), an estimated 163-311 BSI could be avoided in 2014 by using impregnated CVCs for all children in PICU. This thesis highlights the need to assess the impact of linkage error on results and demonstrates the importance of using alternative statistical methods such as PII for handling linkage error within analysis. This work addresses the challenges of exploiting administrative data for research and illustrates the value of linking these data to answer research questions that would otherwise not have been possible.
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- 2014
3. NEONATAL AND INFANT READMISSIONS FOR LATE PRETERM AND EARLY TERM BABIES IN ONTARIO AND ENGLAND : A COHORT STUDY USING LINKED POPULATION-LEVEL HEALTHCARE DATA
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Harron, K, Gilbert, R, Guttmann, A, Cromwell, D, and Van der Meulen, J
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- 2016
4. Incidence rate trends in childhood Type 1 diabetes in Yorkshire, UK 1978–2007: effects of deprivation and age at diagnosis in the south Asian and non-south Asian populations
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Harron, K. L., McKinney, P. A., Feltbower, R. G., Bodansky, H. J., Norman, P. D., Campbell, F. M., and Parslow, R. C.
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- 2011
- Full Text
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5. Yorkshire and Humber childrenʼs diabetes network: combining National Diabetes Audit data with workforce survey and childrenʼs register to assess clinical care within units across the network: A60 (P242)
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Holland, P, Campbell, F, Harron, K, and Parslow, R C
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- 2011
6. GUILD: guidance for information about linking data sets
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Gilbert, R, Lafferty, R, Hagger-Johnson, G, Harron, K, Zhang, LC, Smith, P, Dibben, C, and Goldstein, H
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Journal Article - Abstract
Record linkage of administrative and survey data is increasingly used to generate evidence to inform policy and services. Although a powerful and efficient way of generating new information from existing data sets, errors related to data processing before, during and after linkage can bias results. However, researchers and users of linked data rarely have access to information that can be used to assess these biases or take them into account in analyses. As linked administrative data are increasingly used to provide evidence to guide policy and services, linkage error, which disproportionately affects disadvantaged groups, can undermine evidence for public health. We convened a group of researchers and experts from government data providers to develop guidance about the information that needs to be made available about the data linkage process, by data providers, data linkers, analysts and the researchers who write reports. The guidance goes beyond recommendations for information to be included in research reports. Our aim is to raise awareness of information that may be required at each step of the linkage pathway to improve the transparency, reproducibility, and accuracy of linkage processes, and the validity of analyses and interpretation of results.
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- 2018
7. PIH16 THE COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF STRATEGIES PREVENTING LATE-ONSET INFECTION IN PRETERM INFANTS
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Grosso, A., primary, Faria, R., additional, Bojke, L., additional, Donohue, C., additional, Fraser, C., additional, Harron, K., additional, Oddie, S., additional, and Gilbert, R., additional
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- 2019
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8. P19 Birth, child and maternal outcomes for young and vulnerable mothers in england: a population-based data linkage cohort study
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Harron, K, primary, Fagg, J, additional, Guttmann, A, additional, van der Meulen, J, additional, and Gilbert, R, additional
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- 2019
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9. Explaining local variation in referrals from health services to children’s social care in England 2013–16: a study using ‘children in need’ administrative data
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Emmott, E H, primary, Mc Grath-Lone, L, additional, Harron, K, additional, and Woodman, J, additional
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- 2019
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10. Explaining local variation in referrals from health services to children's social care in England 2013–16: a study using 'children in need' administrative data.
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Emmott, E H, Grath-Lone, L Mc, Harron, K, and Woodman, J
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AUDITING ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,MEDICAL referrals ,CHILD health services ,CHILD welfare ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,POVERTY ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIAL case work ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
Background Referral rates from Health service to Children's Social Care (CSC) services vary across England. In 2019, the National Audit Office (re)iterated the urgent need to understand the drivers of such variation. Methods Using administrative data (Children in Need Census, 2013–16), we calculated annual referral rates from Health to CSC services (Health referral rate) by Local Authority (LA) areas. We used multilevel linear regression to investigate the relationship between age-adjusted Health referral rates and local need (demand factors) and local practice/systems (supply factors). We present a tool to compare unadjusted and adjusted LA rates. Results There was high LA variation in Health referral rates, particularly for infants (mean = 29.0/1000 children < 1 y; range = 6.5–101.8; sd = 12.4). LA variation persisted after age-adjustment. Child poverty (local need) and overall referral rate (local practice/systems) explained 60% of variation in age-adjusted Health referral rates. Overall referral rate was the strongest predictor. Adjusted referral rates were substantially different from unadjusted rates. After adjustment, 57.7% of LAs had higher/lower Health referral rates than expected. Conclusions While higher levels of local need are associated with higher Health referrals, some areas have high Health referrals irrespective of local need. Our tool demonstrates the benefits of using adjusted rates to compare LAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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11. Das RECORD-Statement zum Berichten von Beobachtungsstudien, die routinemäßig gesammelte Gesundheitsdaten verwenden [The REporting of studies Conducted using Observational Routinely-collected health Data (RECORD) statement]
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Benchimol, E.I., Smeeth, L., Guttmann, A., Harron, K., Hemkens, L.G., Moher, D., Petersen, I., Sørensen, H.T., von Elm, E., Langan, S.M., and RECORD Working Committee
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Biomedical Research ,Checklist ,Data Collection ,Germany ,Guidelines as Topic ,Humans ,Research Report/standards ,Administrative Gesundheitsdaten ,Beobachtungsstudien ,CPRD ,Clinical Practice Research Datalink ,Datenbanken zur Grundversorgung ,Dokumentation ,Elektronische Gesundheitsdaten ,Epidemiologische Methoden ,Fall-Kontroll-Studien ,GPRD ,General Practice Research Database ,Gesundheitsbezogene Routinedaten ,HSMR ,Hospital Standardised Mortality Ratio ,ICD ,ISC ,Informationsverbreitung ,International Classification of Diseases ,Kohortenstudien ,Konsensus ,Leitlinien für Forschungsberichte ,MDC ,MeSH ,Medical Subject Heading ,Medizinischen Zeitschriften ,NHS ,NSCLC ,National Health Service ,New South Wales Inpatient Statistics Collection ,New South Wales Midwives Data Collection ,Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer ,PET ,PICANet ,Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network ,Positronen-Emissions-Tomographie ,Publizieren ,RECORD ,REporting of studies Conducted using Observational Routinely collected health Data ,SEER ,SNIIRAM ,STROBE ,Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology ,Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results ,Système National d’Informations Inter Régimes de l’Assurance Maladie ,Wissenschaftliche Zeitschriften ,Wissensverbreitung ,Zeitschriften mit Peer-Review ,case-control studies ,cohort studies ,consensus ,documentation ,electronic health data ,epidemiologic methods ,health administrative data ,information dissemination ,knowledge dissemination ,mHealth-Apps ,medical journals ,mobile Gesundheitsapplikationen ,observational research ,publishing ,reporting guidelines ,routinely collected health data ,scientific journals - Abstract
Routinely collected health data, obtained for administrative and clinical purposes without specific a priori research goals, are increasingly used for research. The rapid evolution and availability of these data have revealed issues not addressed by existing reporting guidelines, such as Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE). The REporting of studies Conducted using Observational Routinely collected health Data (RECORD) statement was created to fill these gaps. RECORD was created as an extension to the STROBE statement to address reporting items specific to observational studies using routinely collected health data. RECORD consists of a checklist of 13 items related to the title, abstract, introduction, methods, results, and discussion section of articles, and other information required for inclusion in such research reports. This document contains the checklist as well as explanatory and elaboration information to enhance the use of the checklist. Examples of good reporting for each RECORD checklist item are also included. This document, as well as the accompanying website and message board (http://www.record-statement.org), will improve the implementation and understanding of RECORD. By implementing RECORD, authors, journals editors, and peer reviewers can enhance transparency of research reporting.
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- 2016
12. Data resource profile: children looked after return (CLA)
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Mc Grath-Lone, L, Harron, K, Dearden, L, Nasim, B, and Gilbert, R
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Looked-after children ,administrative data ,childhood adversity ,Child Welfare ,Humans ,Data Resource Profiles ,children in care ,Child - Published
- 2016
13. Screening ethnically diverse human embryonic stem cells identifies a chromosome 20 minimal amplicon conferring growth advantage
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Amps, K., Andrews, P.W., Anyfantis, G., Armstrong, L., Avery, S., Baharvand, H., Baker, J., Baker, D., Munoz, M.B., Beil, S., Benvenisty, N., Ben-Yosef, D., Biancotti, J.C., Bosman, A., Brena, R.M., Brison, D., Caisander, G., Camarasa, M.V., Chen, J.M., Chiao, E., Choi, Y.M., Choo, A.B.H., Collins, D., Colman, A., Crook, J.M., Daley, G.Q., Dalton, A., Sousa, P.A. de, Denning, C., Downie, J., Dvorak, P., Montgomery, K.D., Feki, A., Ford, A., Fox, V., Fraga, A.M., Frumkin, T., Ge, L., Gokhale, P.J., Golan-Lev, T., Gourabi, H., Gropp, M., Lu, G.X., Hampl, A., Harron, K., Healy, L., Herath, W., Holm, F., Hovatta, O., Hyllner, J., Inamdar, M.S., Irwanto, A.K., Ishii, T., Jaconi, M., Jin, Y., Kimber, S., Kiselev, S., Knowles, B.B., Kopper, O., Kukharenko, V., Kuliev, A., Lagarkova, M.A., Laird, P.W., Lako, M., Laslett, A.L., Lavon, N., Lee, D.R., Lee, J.E., Li, C.L., Lim, L.S., Ludwig, T.E., Ma, Y., Maltby, E., Mateizel, I., Mayshar, Y., Mileikovsky, M., Minger, S.L., Miyazaki, T., Moon, S.Y., Moore, H., Mummery, C., Nagy, A., Nakatsuji, N., Narwani, K., Oh, S.K.W., Oh, S.K., Olson, C., Otonkoski, T., Pan, F., Park, I.H., Pells, S., Pera, M.F., Pereira, L.V., Qi, O., Raj, G.S., Reubinoff, B., Robins, A., Robson, P., Rossant, J., Salekdeh, G.H., Schulz, T.C., Sermon, K., Mohamed, J.S., Shen, H., Sherrer, E., Sidhu, K., Sivarajah, S., Skottman, H., Spits, C., Stacey, G.N., Strehl, R., Strelchenko, N., Suemori, H., Sun, B.W., Suuronen, R., Takahashi, K., Tuuri, T., Venu, P., Verlinsky, Y., Ward-van Oostwaard, D., Weisenberger, D.J., Wu, Y., Yamanaka, S., Young, L., Zhou, Q., Int Stem Cell Initiative, Bosman, Alexis, Feki, Anis, and Jaconi, Marisa
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Inhibitor of Differentiation Protein 1 ,Cellular differentiation ,Ethnic Groups/genetics ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 20 ,Inhibitor of Differentiation Protein 1/genetics/metabolism ,Growth ,ddc:616.07 ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/cytology ,Ethnicity ,Growth/genetics ,Induced pluripotent stem cell ,Genetics ,CÉLULAS-TRONCO ,0303 health sciences ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,RNA-Binding Proteins ,Cell Differentiation ,Amplicon ,Molecular Medicine ,Stem cell ,Biotechnology ,Homeobox protein NANOG ,Genotype ,Cell Differentiation/genetics ,Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells ,bcl-X Protein ,Biomedical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Selection, Genetic/genetics ,Cell Line ,Clonal Evolution ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bcl-X Protein/genetics/metabolism ,Humans ,RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics/metabolism ,Selection, Genetic ,Embryonic Stem Cells ,030304 developmental biology ,Embryonic Stem Cells/cytology ,Genetic Variation ,DNA Methylation ,Molecular biology ,Embryonic stem cell ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 20/genetics ,Clonal Evolution/genetics ,Cell culture ,Chromosome 20 ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The International Stem Cell Initiative analyzed 125 human embryonic stem (ES) cell lines and 11 induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell lines, from 38 laboratories worldwide, for genetic changes occurring during culture. Most lines were analyzed at an early and late passage. Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis revealed that they included representatives of most major ethnic groups. Most lines remained karyotypically normal, but there was a progressive tendency to acquire changes on prolonged culture, commonly affecting chromosomes 1, 12, 17 and 20. DNA methylation patterns changed haphazardly with no link to time in culture. Structural variants, determined from the SNP arrays, also appeared sporadically. No common variants related to culture were observed on chromosomes 1, 12 and 17, but a minimal amplicon in chromosome 20q11.21, including three genes expressed in human ES cells, ID1, BCL2L1 and HM13, occurred in >20% of the lines. Of these genes, BCL2L1 is a strong candidate for driving culture adaptation of ES cells.
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- 2011
14. MORTALITY OF MOTHERS OF INFANTS BORN WITH NEONATAL ABSTINENCE SYNDROME: A POPULATION-BASED TWENTY YEAR COHORT STUDY
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Saunders, N, primary, Amartey, A, additional, Chiu, M, additional, Zhou, L, additional, Harron, K, additional, Gilbert, R, additional, and Guttmann, A, additional
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- 2017
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15. G469 Is variation in line days between neonatal units explained by baby characteristics? a database cohort study
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Fraser, C, primary, Gilbert, R, additional, Oddie, S, additional, and Harron, K, additional
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- 2017
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16. The REporting of studies Conducted using Observational Routinely-collected health Data (RECORD) statement
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Benchimol, E.I., Smeeth, L., Guttmann, A., Harron, K., Moher, D., Petersen, I., Sørensen, H.T., von Elm, E., Langan, S.M., RECORD Working Committee, Altman, D., de Klerk, N., Hemkens, LG., Henry, D., Januel, JM., Le Pogam LA., Manuel, D., Patrick, K., Perel, P., Romano, PS., Tugwell, P., Warren, J., Weber, W., and Winker, M.
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Biomedical Research ,Checklist ,Guidelines as Topic ,Observational Studies as Topic ,Research Design ,Research Report/standards - Abstract
Routinely collected health data, obtained for administrative and clinical purposes without specific a priori research goals, are increasingly used for research. The rapid evolution and availability of these data have revealed issues not addressed by existing reporting guidelines, such as Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE). The REporting of studies Conducted using Observational Routinely collected health Data (RECORD) statement was created to fill these gaps. RECORD was created as an extension to the STROBE statement to address reporting items specific to observational studies using routinely collected health data. RECORD consists of a checklist of 13 items related to the title, abstract, introduction, methods, results, and discussion section of articles, and other information required for inclusion in such research reports. This document contains the checklist and explanatory and elaboration information to enhance the use of the checklist. Examples of good reporting for each RECORD checklist item are also included herein. This document, as well as the accompanying website and message board (http://www.record-statement.org), will enhance the implementation and understanding of RECORD. Through implementation of RECORD, authors, journals editors, and peer reviewers can encourage transparency of research reporting.
- Published
- 2015
17. P127 Neonatal and infant readmissions for late preterm and early term babies in Ontario and England: a cohort study using linked population-level healthcare data
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Harron, K, primary, Gilbert, R, additional, Guttmann, A, additional, Cromwell, D, additional, and Van der Meulen, J, additional
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- 2016
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18. The clinical, occupational and financial outcomes associated with a bespoke specialist clinic for military aircrew—a cohort study
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Pavitt, A.J., primary, Pavitt, C.W., additional, Harron, K., additional, Jones, M., additional, Timperley, A.C., additional, Reid, A.N.C., additional, Mcloughlin, D., additional, d'Arcy, J., additional, and Nicol, E.D., additional
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- 2015
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19. Making a hash of data: what risks to privacy does the NHS's care.data scheme pose?
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Hagger-Johnson, G. E., primary, Harron, K., additional, Goldstein, H., additional, Parslow, R., additional, Dattani, N., additional, Borja, M. C., additional, Wijlaars, L., additional, and Gilbert, R., additional
- Published
- 2014
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20. Impregnated central venous catheters should be readily used to reduce risk of bloodstream infection
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Gilbert, R., primary, Harron, K., additional, Mok, Q., additional, and Gamble, C., additional
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- 2013
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21. A novel method of coronary artery calcium quantification on CT coronary angiography
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Pavitt, C. W., primary, Lindsay, A. C., additional, Zielke, S., additional, Ray, R., additional, Harron, K., additional, Padley, S., additional, Rubens, M., additional, and Nicol, E., additional
- Published
- 2013
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22. The clinical, occupational and financial outcomes associated with a bespoke specialist clinic for military aircrew-a cohort study.
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Pavitt, A. J., Pavitt, C. W., Harron, K., Jones, M., Timperley, A. C., Reid, A. N. C., Mcloughlin, D., d'Arcy, J., and Nicol, E. D.
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MILITARY air pilots ,COHORT analysis ,CARDIOVASCULAR disease diagnosis ,CARDIOLOGY ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Objectives: To assess the clinical, occupational and financial outcomes of a new Clinical Aviation Medicine Service (CAMS) for UK military personnel. Methods: Consecutive patients over a 2 year period were included. Predictors of flying restrictions at referral and final outcome following consultation were modelled using logistic regression. National Health Service (NHS) Payment by Results tariffs and Defence capitation data were used to assess the financial impact of the service. Results: Eight hundred and sixteen new referrals (94.5% male, median age 45 years (range 19-75)) were received and 1025 consultations performed. Cardiovascular disease was the commonest reason for referral. CAMS clinical activity cost at NHS tariff was £453 310 representing a saving of £316 173 (£137 137 delivery cost). In total, 310/816 (38%) patients had employment restrictions on referral and 49.0% of this group returned to full employment following their initial consultation. Compared with cardiology, general medicine and respiratory patients were more likely to have been occupationally restricted prior to referral (50 vs. 35%, OR 1.81; 95% CI 1.18-2.76, P values=0.006 and 53 vs. 35%, OR 2.12; 95% CI 1.15-3.90, P values = 0.016, respectively). Overall 581/816 (71.2%) of patients returned to unrestricted employment while 98/816 (12.0%) were unable to continue in any aircrew role. The service saved 7000 lost working days per year at an estimated occupational saving of ∼£1 million per annum. Conclusions: This bespoke service has allowed rapid, occupationally relevant clinical care to be delivered with both time and financial savings. The model may have significant occupational and financial relevance for other environmental and occupational medical organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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23. Consistency between national guidelines and reported practice for reducing the risk of catheter-related infection in british picus
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Harron, K. L., primary, Ramachandra, G., additional, Mok, Q., additional, and Gilbert, R., additional
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- 2011
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24. 020 Incidence rate trends in childhood type 1 diabetes in Yorkshire, 1978-2007: effects of ethnicity and age at diagnosis
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Harron, K., primary, McKinney, P. A., additional, Feltbower, R. G., additional, Stephenson, C. R., additional, Bodansky, H. J., additional, Norman, P., additional, and Parslow, R. C., additional
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- 2010
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25. G469 Is variation in line days between neonatal units explained by baby characteristics? a database cohort study
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Fraser, C, Gilbert, R, Oddie, S, and Harron, K
- Abstract
AimsWe aimed to identify determinants of variation in central line use between neonatal units in England.MethodsWe obtained data from the National Neonatal Research Database at Imperial College London for 112 neonatal intensive care and high dependency care units in England for the period 2010 to 2015, as part of the PREVAIL Generalisability Study (ISRCTN: 81931394). The data contained daily care records, including the presence of central lines, and birth details. We defined central line days as days when a peripherally inserted cutaneous long line, surgical central venous catheter, umbilical venous catheter or umbilical arterial catheter was present. We used multi-level Poisson regression to model line days per admission, adjusting for gestation, birthweight, age at admission, surgery and days on respiratory support.ResultsOf 62 948 admissions with gestation <32 weeks, 58 550 (93.3%) had a central line compared with 244,916/368,065 (66.5%) admissions with a gestation 32 weeks. The median line days per admission by unit ranged from 1 to 16 for babies with gestation <32 weeks and from 0 to 5 days for babies with gestation 32 weeks. Fewer line days were associated with later gestation (incidence rate-ratio (IRR) for each week of gestation 0.90; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.89 to 0.90) and older age at admission (IRR for each day of age 0.99; 95% CI 0.99 to 0.99). Longer line duration was associated with surgery (IRR 2.27; 95% CI 2.24 to 2.30) and days on respiratory support (IRR 1.02; 95% CI 1.02 to 1.02). Multi-level Poisson regression demonstrated significant variation in line days between units (0.66), of which 93% could be attributed to differences between babies.ConclusionNearly all variation in line days between units was explained by differences in baby case-mix. We suggest when using line days as a denominator for comparing rates of bloodstream infection between neonatal units, case mix should be taken into account.
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- 2017
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26. Symptomatic dengue and adverse pregnancy outcomes : a population-based record linkage study
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Paixão, E. S., Rodrigues, L. C., Harron, K., and Brickley, E. B.
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616.9 - Abstract
Dengue stands out from other viral mosquito borne diseases because it is the most common; its incidence is growing and it is reaching new geographical areas and spreading worldwide. Indeed, reported cases of negative pregnancy outcomes after dengue infection is not new, however, the evidence of the association between maternal dengue and adverse pregnancy outcomes is limited, controversial and mostly supported by cases reports. The aim of this thesis is to explore the relationship between pregnancy outcome and symptomatic maternal dengue. I conducted a population-based study using routinely-collected Brazilian data from 2006-2012. These data have the information required to expand the existing knowledge on birth outcomes from women with dengue acquired during pregnancy. The linkage process imposed complex challenges, and the final linked data showed a low sensitivity. However, it is unlikely that the linkage error introduced bias on the final analysis since it occurred randomly between cases and the comparison group. Our main findings showed that dengue during pregnancy is associated with adverse maternal and birth outcomes. The effect was higher in the acute disease period (first 10/20 days) and severe disease increased the magnitude of the association. Therefore in areas where dengue virus is circulating, the health of pregnant women should be not only a public health priority, but health professionals attending pregnant women with dengue should more closely observe these patients to be able to intervene in a timely way and avoid adverse outcomes.
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- 2019
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27. Symptomatic dengue and adverse pregnancy outcomes: a population-based record linkage study
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Paixão, ES, Rodrigues, LC, Harron, K, and Brickley, EB
- Abstract
Dengue stands out from other viral mosquito borne diseases because it is the most common; its incidence is growing and it is reaching new geographical areas and spreading worldwide. Indeed, reported cases of negative pregnancy outcomes after dengue infection is not new, however, the evidence of the association between maternal dengue and adverse pregnancy outcomes is limited, controversial and mostly supported by cases reports. The aim of this thesis is to explore the relationship between pregnancy outcome and symptomatic maternal dengue. I conducted a population-based study using routinely-collected Brazilian data from 2006-2012. These data have the information required to expand the existing knowledge on birth outcomes from women with dengue acquired during pregnancy. The linkage process imposed complex challenges, and the final linked data showed a low sensitivity. However, it is unlikely that the linkage error introduced bias on the final analysis since it occurred randomly between cases and the comparison group. Our main findings showed that dengue during pregnancy is associated with adverse maternal and birth outcomes. The effect was higher in the acute disease period (first 10/20 days) and severe disease increased the magnitude of the association. Therefore in areas where dengue virus is circulating, the health of pregnant women should be not only a public health priority, but health professionals attending pregnant women with dengue should more closely observe these patients to be able to intervene in a timely way and avoid adverse outcomes.
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- 2019
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28. Privacy-preserving Record Linkage
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Rainer Schnell, Harron, K., Goldstein, H., and Dibben, C.
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QA75 ,Privacy preserving ,Computer science ,Human–computer interaction ,Soziologie, Sozialwissenschaften ,Bloom filter ,Record linkage - Published
- 2016
29. How does health visiting in the first year of life vary by family characteristics? A longitudinal analysis of administrative data.
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Bunting C, Clery A, McGrath-Lone L, Liu M, Kendall S, Bedford H, Cavallaro F, Saloniki EC, Harron K, and Woodman J
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Background: The health visiting service in UK promotes the health and wellbeing of families with young children and comprises a universal offer (three mandated contacts between birth and 12 months) and additional contacts based on need. We aimed to understand how the level of health visiting support received varies by family characteristics., Methods: Using the Community Services Data Set linked to Hospital Episode Statistics, we identified 52 555 children in 10 local authorities with complete health visiting data for 12 months between April 2016 and March 2020. We analysed variation in health visiting contacts by deprivation, child ethnicity, maternal age, adversity and previous live births., Results: 41 340/52 555 children (79%) received the universal service; 63% received ≥1 additional contact and 25% received ≥3 additional contacts. The likelihood of receiving ≥3 additional contacts was greatest for children whose mothers had a history of hospital admissions relating to mental health, violence, self-harm or substance misuse (adjusted relative risk = 1.55, 95% confidence interval 1.26-1.92)., Conclusions: Most families received health visiting support in addition to the universal service. Policymakers and commissioners should consider how health visiting services can be expanded or targeted more effectively to ensure all families receive the support they need., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Faculty of Public Health.)
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- 2024
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30. Common errors in statistics and methods.
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Flom P, Harron K, Ballesteros J, Kalinda C, Koutoumanou E, Miles J, Nevitt SJ, and Rohloff P
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- Humans, Periodicals as Topic, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Pediatrics, Statistics as Topic methods, Research Design standards
- Abstract
As statistical reviewers and editors for BMJ Paediatrics Open (BMJPO), we frequently see methodological and statistical errors in articles submitted to our journal. To make a list of these common errors and propose suitable corrections, and inspired by similar efforts at other leading journals, we surveyed the statistical reviewers and editors at BMJPO to collect their 'pet peeves' and examples of best practices.(1, 2) We have divided these into seven sections: graphics; statistical significance and related issues; presentation, vocabulary, textual and tabular presentation; causality; model building, regression and choice of methods; meta-analysis; and miscellaneous. Here, we present the common errors, with brief explanations. We hope that the guidance provided here will help guide authors as they prepare their submissions to the journal, leading to higher quality and more robust research reporting., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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31. COVID-19 diagnosis, vaccination during pregnancy, and adverse pregnancy outcomes of 865,654 women in England and Wales: a population-based cohort study.
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Raffetti E, Bolton T, Nolan J, Zuccolo L, Denholm R, Smith G, Akbari A, Harron K, Curry G, Allara E, Lawlor DA, Caputo M, Abbasizanjani H, Chico T, and Wood AM
- Abstract
Background: The extent to which COVID-19 diagnosis and vaccination during pregnancy are associated with risks of common and rare adverse pregnancy outcomes remains uncertain. We compared the incidence of adverse pregnancy outcomes in women with and without COVID-19 diagnosis and vaccination during pregnancy., Methods: We studied population-scale linked electronic health records for women with singleton pregnancies in England and Wales from 1 August 2019 to 31 December 2021. This time period was divided at 8th December 2020 into pre-vaccination and vaccination roll-out eras. We calculated adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for common and rare pregnancy outcomes according to the time since COVID-19 diagnosis and vaccination and by pregnancy trimester and COVID-19 variant., Findings: Amongst 865,654 pregnant women, we recorded 60,134 (7%) COVID-19 diagnoses and 182,120 (21%) adverse pregnancy outcomes. COVID-19 diagnosis was associated with a higher risk of gestational diabetes (adjusted HR 1.22, 95% CI 1.18-1.26), gestational hypertension (1.16, 1.10-1.22), pre-eclampsia (1.20, 1.12-1.28), preterm birth (1.63, 1.57-1.69, and 1.68, 1.61-1.75 for spontaneous preterm), very preterm birth (2.04, 1.86-2.23), small for gestational age (1.12, 1.07-1.18), thrombotic venous events (1.85, 1.56-2.20) and stillbirth (only within 14-days since COVID-19 diagnosis, 3.39, 2.23-5.15). HRs were more pronounced in the pre-vaccination era, within 14-days since COVID-19 diagnosis, when COVID-19 diagnosis occurred in the 3rd trimester, and in the original variant era. There was no evidence to suggest COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy was associated with a higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes. Instead, dose 1 of COVID-19 vaccine was associated with lower risks of preterm birth (0.90, 0.86-0.95), very preterm birth (0.84, 0.76-0.94), small for gestational age (0.93, 0.88-0.99), and stillbirth (0.67, 0.49-0.92)., Interpretation: Pregnant women with a COVID-19 diagnosis have higher risks of adverse pregnancy outcomes. These findings support recommendations towards high-priority vaccination against COVID-19 in pregnant women., Funding: BHF, ESRC, Forte, HDR-UK, MRC, NIHR and VR., Competing Interests: G Smith: GSK. Consultant and member of expert panel for RSV vaccination in pregnancy. GSK. Member of Data Safety Monitoring Committee for trials of RSV vaccination in pregnancy Moderna. Member of Data Safety Monitoring Committee for trials of RSV vaccination in pregnancy. No other conflicts of interest to be disclosed. D A Lawlor: European Research Council, Research grant administered by University of Bristol. No conflict with this paper; and Diabetes UK, Research grant administered by University of Bristol. No conflict with this paper., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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32. Evaluating the real-world implementation of the Family Nurse Partnership in England: a data linkage study.
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Cavallaro F, Clery A, Gilbert R, van der Meulen J, Kendall S, Kennedy E, Phillips C, and Harron K
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- Humans, Female, Adolescent, England, Child, Young Adult, Child, Preschool, Infant, Information Storage and Retrieval, Pregnancy, Infant, Newborn, Cohort Studies, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Child Abuse, Family Nursing organization & administration, House Calls
- Abstract
Background/objectives: The Family Nurse Partnership is an intensive home visiting programme for adolescent mothers. We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of the Family Nurse Partnership on outcomes up to age 7 using national administrative data., Design: We created a linked cohort of all mothers aged 13-19 using data from health, educational and children's social care and defined mothers enrolled in the Family Nurse Partnership or not using Family Nurse Partnership system data. Propensity scores were used to create matched groups for analysis., Setting: One hundred and thirty-six local authorities in England with active Family Nurse Partnership sites between 2010 and 2017., Participants: Mothers aged 13-19 at last menstrual period with live births between April 2010 and March 2019, living in a Family Nurse Partnership catchment area and their firstborn child(ren)., Interventions: The Family Nurse Partnership includes up to 64 home visits by a family nurse from early pregnancy until the child's second birthday and is combined with usual health and social care. Controls received usual health and social care., Main Outcome Measures: Indicators of child maltreatment (hospital admissions for injury/maltreatment, referral to social care services); child health and development (hospital utilisation and education) outcomes and maternal hospital utilisation and educational outcomes up to 7 years following birth., Data Sources: Family Nurse Partnership Information System, Hospital Episode Statistics, National Pupil Database., Results: Of 110,520 eligible mothers, 25,680 (23.2%) were enrolled in the Family Nurse Partnership. Enrolment rates varied across 122 sites (range: 11-68%). Areas with more eligible mothers had lower enrolment rates. Enrolment was higher among mothers aged 13-15 (52%), than 18-19 year-olds (21%). Indicators of child maltreatment: we found no evidence of an association between the Family Nurse Partnership and indicators of child maltreatment, except for an increased rate of unplanned admissions for maltreatment/injury-related diagnoses up to age 2 for children born to Family Nurse Partnership mothers (6.6% vs. 5.7%, relative risk 1.15; 95% confidence interval 1.07 to 1.24). Child health and developmental outcomes: there was weak evidence that children born to Family Nurse Partnership mothers were more likely to achieve a Good Level of Development at age 5 (57.5% vs. 55.4%, relative risk 1.05; 95% confidence interval 1.00 to 1.09). Maternal outcomes: There was some evidence that Family Nurse Partnership mothers were less likely to have a subsequent delivery within 18 months of the index birth (8.4% vs. 9.3%, relative risk 0.92; 95% confidence interval 0.88 to 0.97). Younger and more vulnerable mothers received higher numbers of visits and were more likely to achieve fidelity targets. Meeting the fidelity targets was associated with some outcomes., Limitations: Bias by indication and variation in the intervention and usual care over time and between areas may have limited our ability to detect effects. Multiple testing may have led to spurious, significant results., Conclusions: This study supports findings from evaluations of the Family Nurse Partnership showing no evidence of benefit for maltreatment outcomes measured in administrative data. Amongst all the outcomes measured, we found weak evidence that the Family Nurse Partnership was associated with improvements in child development at school entry, a reduction in rapid repeat pregnancies and evidence of increased healthcare-seeking in the mother and child., Future Work: Future evaluations should capture better measures of Family Nurse Partnership interventions and usual care, more information on maternal risk factors and additional outcomes relating to maternal well-being., Study Registration: The study is registered as NIHR CRN Portfolio (42900)., Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 17/99/19) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research ; Vol. 12, No. 11. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.
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- 2024
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33. Planned and unplanned hospital admissions and health-related school absence rates in children with neurodisability: Protocol for a population-based study using linked education and hospital data from England.
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Gimeno L, Zylbersztejn A, Cant A, Harron K, and Gilbert R
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Background: Neurodisability describes a broad set of conditions affecting the brain and nervous system which result in functional limitations. Children with neurodisability have more hospital admissions than their peers without neurodisability and higher rates of school absence. However, longitudinal evidence comparing rates of hospital admission and school absence in children with neurodisability to peers without neurodisability throughout school is limited, as is understanding about whether differences are greatest for planned care (e.g., scheduled appointments) or unplanned care. This study will describe rates of planned and unplanned hospital admissions and school absence due to illness and medical reasons throughout primary school (Reception to Year 6, ages 4 to 11 in England) for children with neurodisability and all other children, using linked individual-level health and education data., Methods: We will use the ECHILD (Education and Child Insights from Linked Data) database, which links educational and health records across England. We will define a primary school cohort of children who were born in National Health Service-funded hospitals in England between 1
st September 2003 and 31st August 2008, and who were enrolled in Reception (age 4/5) at state-funded schools. We will use hospital admissions records to identify children who have recorded indicators of neurodisability from birth up to the end of primary school (Year 6, age 10/11)., Results: We will describe rates of planned and unplanned hospital admissions and health-related school absence for three groups of children: those with a neurodisability indicator first recorded before beginning primary school, those with neurodisability first recorded during primary school, and those without a record of neurodisability before end of primary school., Conclusions: We will further explore whether differences between these group vary across primary school years and by socioeconomic and demographic characteristics., Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed., (Copyright: © 2024 Gimeno L et al.)- Published
- 2024
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34. Data Resource Profile: A national linked mother-baby cohort of health, education and social care data in England (ECHILD-MB).
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Feng Q, Ireland G, Gilbert R, and Harron K
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- Humans, England epidemiology, Female, Adult, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Cohort Studies, Young Adult, Educational Status, Adolescent, Mothers statistics & numerical data
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- 2024
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35. Author Correction: COVID-19 vaccination coverage for half a million non-EU migrants and refugees in England.
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Burns R, Wyke S, Eyre MT, Boukari Y, Sørensen TB, Tsang C, Campbell CNJ, Beale S, Zenner D, Hargreaves S, Campos-Matos I, Harron K, and Aldridge RW
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- 2024
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36. COVID-19 vaccination coverage for half a million non-EU migrants and refugees in England.
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Burns R, Wyke S, Eyre MT, Boukari Y, Sørensen TB, Tsang C, Campbell CNJ, Beale S, Zenner D, Hargreaves S, Campos-Matos I, Harron K, and Aldridge RW
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- Humans, COVID-19 Vaccines, Vaccination Coverage, Vaccination, Transients and Migrants, Refugees, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Despite evidence suggesting that some migrants are at risk of under-immunization and have experienced severe health inequities during the pandemic, data are limited on migrants' COVID-19 vaccine coverage globally. Here we linked data from non-European Union migrants and resettled refugees to the national COVID-19 vaccination dataset in England. We estimated patterns in second and third dose delays and overdue doses between 12 December 2020 and 20 April 2022 by age, visa type and ethnicity. Of the 465,470 linked records, 91.8% (427,073/465,470) of migrants received a second dose and 51.3% (238,721/465,470) received a third. Refugees had the highest risk of delayed second (adjusted odds ratio 1.66; 95% confidence interval 1.55-1.79) and third dose (1.55; 1.43-1.69). Black migrants were twice as likely to have a second dose delayed (2.37; 2.23-2.54) than white migrants, but this trend reversed for the third dose. Older migrants (>65 years) were four times less likely to have received their second or third dose compared with the general population in England aged >65 or older. Policymakers, researchers and practitioners should work to understand and address personal and structural barriers to vaccination for diverse migrant populations., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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37. Linking migration and hospital data in England: linkage process and evaluation of bias.
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Burns R, Wyke S, Boukari Y, Katikireddi SV, Zenner D, Campos-Matos I, Harron K, and Aldridge RW
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- Humans, Emigration and Immigration, England, Hospitals, State Medicine, Transients and Migrants
- Abstract
Introduction: Difficulties ascertaining migrant status in national data sources such as hospital records have limited large-scale evaluation of migrant healthcare needs in many countries, including England. Linkage of immigration data for migrants and refugees, with National Health Service (NHS) hospital care data enables research into the relationship between migration and health for a large cohort of international migrants., Objectives: We aimed to describe the linkage process and compare linkage rates between migrant sub-groups to evaluate for potential bias for data on non-EU migrants and resettled refugees linked to Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) in England., Methods: We used stepwise deterministic linkage to match records from migrants and refugees to a unique healthcare identifier indicating interaction with the NHS (linkage stage 1 to NHS Personal Demographic Services, PDS), and then to hospital records (linkage stage 2 to HES). We calculated linkage rates and compared linked and unlinked migrant characteristics for each linkage stage., Results: Of the 1,799,307 unique migrant records, 1,134,007 (63%) linked to PDS and 451,689 (25%) linked to at least one hospital record between 01/01/2005 and 23/03/2020. Individuals on work, student, or working holiday visas were less likely to link to a hospital record than those on settlement and dependent visas and refugees. Migrants from the Middle East and North Africa and South Asia were four times more likely to link to at least one hospital record, compared to those from East Asia and the Pacific. Differences in age, sex, visa type, and region of origin between linked and unlinked samples were small to moderate., Conclusion: This linked dataset represents a unique opportunity to explore healthcare use in migrants. However, lower linkage rates disproportionately affected individuals on shorter-term visas so future studies of these groups may be more biased as a result. Increasing the quality and completeness of identifiers recorded in administrative data could improve data linkage quality., Competing Interests: Statement on conflicts of interest: RB has received funding from Doctors of the World and is the chair of the UK Refugee and Migrant Health Research Consortium.
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- 2024
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38. Examining the quality and population representativeness of linked survey and administrative data: guidance and illustration using linked 1958 National Child Development Study and Hospital Episode Statistics data.
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Silverwood RJ, Rajah N, Calderwood L, De Stavola BL, Harron K, and Ploubidis GB
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- Child, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Hospitalization, Hospitals, Child Development, Medical Record Linkage methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Recent years have seen an increase in linkages between survey and administrative data. It is important to evaluate the quality of such data linkages to discern the likely reliability of ensuing research. Evaluation of linkage quality and bias can be conducted using different approaches, but many of these are not possible when there is a separation of processes for linkage and analysis to help preserve privacy, as is typically the case in the UK (and elsewhere)., Objectives: We aimed to describe a suite of generalisable methods to evaluate linkage quality and population representativeness of linked survey and administrative data which remain tractable when users of the linked data are not party to the linkage process itself. We emphasise issues particular to longitudinal survey data throughout., Methods: Our proposed approaches cover several areas: i) Linkage rates, ii) Selection into response, linkage consent and successful linkage, iii) Linkage quality, and iv) Linked data population representativeness. We illustrate these methods using a recent linkage between the 1958 National Child Development Study (NCDS; a cohort following an initial 17,415 people born in Great Britain in a single week of 1958) and Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) databases (containing important information regarding admissions, accident and emergency attendances and outpatient appointments at NHS hospitals in England)., Results: Our illustrative analyses suggest that the linkage quality of the NCDS-HES data is high and that the linked sample maintains an excellent level of population representativeness with respect to the single dimension we assessed., Conclusions: Through this work we hope to encourage providers and users of linked data resources to undertake and publish thorough evaluations. We further hope that providing illustrative analyses using linked NCDS-HES data will improve the quality and transparency of research using this particular linked data resource., Competing Interests: Statement on conflicts of interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
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- 2024
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39. Using linked administrative data to aid the handling of non-response and restore sample representativeness in cohort studies: the 1958 national child development study and hospital episode statistics data.
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Rajah N, Calderwood L, De Stavola BL, Harron K, Ploubidis GB, and Silverwood RJ
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- Adult, Infant, Newborn, Child, Humans, Aged, Middle Aged, Cohort Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Hospitals, Child Development, Social Class
- Abstract
Background: There is growing interest in whether linked administrative data have the potential to aid analyses subject to missing data in cohort studies., Methods: Using linked 1958 National Child Development Study (NCDS; British cohort born in 1958, n = 18,558) and Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data, we applied a LASSO variable selection approach to identify HES variables which are predictive of non-response at the age 55 sweep of NCDS. We then included these variables as auxiliary variables in multiple imputation (MI) analyses to explore the extent to which they helped restore sample representativeness of the respondents together with the imputed non-respondents in terms of early life variables (father's social class at birth, cognitive ability at age 7) and relative to external population benchmarks (educational qualifications and marital status at age 55)., Results: We identified 10 HES variables that were predictive of non-response at age 55 in NCDS. For example, cohort members who had been treated for adult mental illness had more than 70% greater odds of bring non-respondents (odds ratio 1.73; 95% confidence interval 1.17, 2.51). Inclusion of these HES variables in MI analyses only helped to restore sample representativeness to a limited extent. Furthermore, there was essentially no additional gain in sample representativeness relative to analyses using only previously identified survey predictors of non-response (i.e. NCDS rather than HES variables)., Conclusions: Inclusion of HES variables only aided missing data handling in NCDS to a limited extent. However, these findings may not generalise to other analyses, cohorts or linked administrative datasets. This work provides a demonstration of the use of linked administrative data for the handling of missing cohort data which we hope will act as template for others., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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40. Evaluation of variation in special educational needs provision and its impact on health and education using administrative records for England: umbrella protocol for a mixed-methods research programme.
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Zylbersztejn A, Lewis K, Nguyen V, Matthews J, Winterburn I, Karwatowska L, Barnes S, Lilliman M, Saxton J, Stone A, Boddy K, Downs J, Logan S, Rahi J, Black-Hawkins K, Dearden L, Ford T, Harron K, De Stavola B, and Gilbert R
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- Humans, Adolescent, Parents, Educational Status, Communication, Review Literature as Topic, State Medicine, Schools
- Abstract
Introduction: One-third of children in England have special educational needs (SEN) provision recorded during their school career. The proportion of children with SEN provision varies between schools and demographic groups, which may reflect variation in need, inequitable provision and/or systemic factors. There is scant evidence on whether SEN provision improves health and education outcomes., Methods: The Health Outcomes of young People in Education (HOPE) research programme uses administrative data from the Education and Child Health Insights from Linked Data-ECHILD-which contains data from all state schools, and contacts with National Health Service hospitals in England, to explore variation in SEN provision and its impact on health and education outcomes. This umbrella protocol sets out analyses across four work packages (WP). WP1 defined a range of 'health phenotypes', that is health conditions expected to need SEN provision in primary school. Next, we describe health and education outcomes (WP1) and individual, school-level and area-level factors affecting variation in SEN provision across different phenotypes (WP2). WP3 assesses the impact of SEN provision on health and education outcomes for specific health phenotypes using a range of causal inference methods to account for confounding factors and possible selection bias. In WP4 we review local policies and synthesise findings from surveys, interviews and focus groups of service users and providers to understand factors associated with variation in and experiences of identification, assessment and provision for SEN. Triangulation of findings on outcomes, variation and impact of SEN provision for different health phenotypes in ECHILD, with experiences of SEN provision will inform interpretation of findings for policy, practice and families and methods for future evaluation., Ethics and Dissemination: Research ethics committees have approved the use of the ECHILD database and, separately, the survey, interviews and focus groups of young people, parents and service providers. These stakeholders will contribute to the design, interpretation and communication of findings., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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41. Recording and analysing ethnicity in public health research: a bibliographical review and focus group discussions with young migrants and refugees in the UK.
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Lam J, Aldridge RW, Blackburn R, and Harron K
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- Humans, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Ethnicity, Focus Groups, Public Health, Cross-Sectional Studies, Longitudinal Studies, United Kingdom, Transients and Migrants, Refugees
- Abstract
Background: The ethnicity data gap hinders public health research from addressing ethnic health inequity in the UK, especially for under-served young, migrant populations. We aimed to review how ethnicity was captured, reported, analysed, and theorised within policy-relevant research., Methods: For this bibliographical review, we reviewed a selection of the 1% most highly cited population health papers reporting UK ethnicity data in MEDLINE and Web of Science databases between Jan 1, 1946, and July 31, 2022, and extracted how ethnicity was recorded and analysed. We included cross-sectional, longitudinal cohort studies, and randomised trials using only UK populations, which were peer-reviewed, were written in English, and reported ethnicity and any health-related outcomes. We held three focus groups with ten participants aged 18-25 years, from Nigeria, Turkistan, Syria, Yemen, and Iran to help us shape and interpret our findings, and asked "How should ethnicity be asked inclusively, and better recorded?" and "Does ethnicity change over time or context? If so, why?". We consolidated feedback from our focus groups into a co-created poster with recommendations for researchers studying ethnicity and health. Written informed consent was obtained for focus group participation., Findings: Of 44 papers included in the review, 19 (43%) used self-reported ethnicity, but the number of ethnic categories provided varied. Of 27 papers that aggregated ethnicity, 13 (48%) provided justification. Only eight (18%) explicitly theorised how ethnicity related to health. The focus groups agreed that (1) ethnicity should not be prescribed by others (individuals could be asked to describe their ethnicity in free-text, which researchers could synthesise to extract relevant dimensions of ethnicity for their research) and (2) Ethnicity changes over time and context according to personal experience, social pressure, and nationality change. The lived experience of ethnicity of migrants and non-migrants is not fully interchangeable, even if they share the same ethnic category., Interpretation: Researchers should communicate clearly how ethnicity is operationalised in their studies, with appropriate justification for clustering and analysis that is meaningfully theorised. Our study was limited by its non-systematic nature. Implementing the recommendation to capture ethnicity via free text remains challenging in administrative data systems., Funding: UCL Engagement Beacon Bursary., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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42. Using administrative data to evaluate national policy impacts on child and maternal health: a research framework from the Maternal and Child Health Network (MatCHNet).
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Stewart E, Brophy S, Cookson R, Gilbert R, Given J, Hardelid P, Harron K, Leyland A, Pearce A, Wood R, and Dundas R
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- Child, Female, Humans, Family, Health Policy, Policy, Child Health, Health Equity, Maternal Health
- Abstract
Reducing health inequalities by addressing the social circumstances in which children are conceived and raised is a societal priority. Early interventions are key to improving outcomes in childhood and long-term into adulthood. Across the UK nations, there is strong political commitment to invest in the early years. National policy interventions aim to tackle health inequalities and deliver health equity for all children. Evidence to determine the effectiveness of socio-structural policies on child health outcomes is especially pressing given the current social and economic challenges facing policy-makers and families with children. As an alternative to clinical trials or evaluating local interventions, we propose a research framework that supports evaluating the impact of whole country policies on child health outcomes. Three key research challenges must be addressed to enable such evaluations and improve policy for child health: (1) policy prioritisation, (2) identification of comparable data and (3) application of robust methods., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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43. How is ethnicity reported, described, and analysed in health research in the UK? A bibliographical review and focus group discussions with young refugees.
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Lam J, Aldridge R, Blackburn R, and Harron K
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- Humans, Adolescent, Focus Groups, Health Status Disparities, United Kingdom, Ethnicity, Refugees
- Abstract
Background: The ethnicity data gap pertains to 3 major challenges to address ethnic health inequality: 1) Under-representation of ethnic minorities in research; 2) Poor data quality on ethnicity; 3) Ethnicity data not being meaningfully analysed. These challenges are especially relevant for research involving under-served migrant populations in the UK. We aimed to review how ethnicity is captured, reported, analysed and theorised within policy-relevant research on ethnic health inequities., Methods: We reviewed a selection of the 1% most highly cited population health papers that reported UK data on ethnicity, and extracted how ethnicity was recorded and analysed in relation to health outcomes. We focused on how ethnicity was obtained (i.e. self reported or not), how ethnic groups were categorised, whether justification was provided for any categorisation, and how ethnicity was theorised to be related to health. We held three 1-h-long guided focus groups with 10 young people from Nigeria, Turkistan, Syria, Yemen and Iran. This engagement helped us shape and interpret our findings, and reflect on. 1) How should ethnicity be asked inclusively, and better recorded? 2) Does self-defined ethnicity change over time or context? If so, why?, Results: Of the 44 included papers, most (19; 43%) used self-reported ethnicity, categorised in a variety of ways. Of the 27 papers that aggregated ethnicity, 13 (48%) provided justification. Only 8 of 33 papers explicitly theorised how ethnicity related to health. The focus groups agreed that 1) Ethnicity should not be prescribed by others; individuals could be asked to describe their ethnicity in free-text which researchers could synthesise to extract relevant dimensions of ethnicity for their research; 2) Ethnicity changes over time and context according to personal experience, social pressure, and nationality change; 3) Migrants and non-migrants' lived experience of ethnicity is not fully inter-changeable, even if they share the same ethnic category., Conclusions: Ethnicity is a multi-dimensional construct, but this is not currently reflected in UK health research studies, where ethnicity is often aggregated and analysed without justification. Researchers should communicate clearly how ethnicity is operationalised for their study, with appropriate justification for clustering and analysis that is meaningfully theorised. We can only start to tackle ethnic health inequity by treating ethnicity as rigorously as any other variables in our research., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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44. Is there a sex difference in mortality rates in paediatric intensive care units?: a systematic review.
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Almossawi O, Friend A, Palla L, Feltbower RG, Sardo-Infiri S, O'Brien S, Harron K, Nadel S, Saunders P, and De Stavola B
- Abstract
Introduction: Mortality rates in infancy and childhood are lower in females than males. However, for children admitted to Paediatric Intensive Care Units (PICU), mortality has been reported to be lower in males, although males have higher admission rates. This female mortality excess for the subgroup of children admitted in intensive care is not well understood. To address this, we carried out a systematic literature review to summarise the available evidence. Our review studies the differences in mortality between males and females aged 0 to <18 years, while in a PICU, to examine whether there was a clear difference (in either direction) in PICU mortality between the two sexes, and, if present, to describe the magnitude and direction of this difference., Methods: Any studies that directly or indirectly reported the rates of mortality in children admitted to intensive care by sex were eligible for inclusion. The search strings were based on terms related to the population (those admitted into a paediatric intensive care unit), the exposure (sex), and the outcome (mortality). We used the search databases MEDLINE, Embase, and Web of Science as these cover relevant clinical publications. We assessed the reliability of included studies using a modified version of the risk of bias in observational studies of exposures (ROBINS-E) tool. We considered estimating a pooled effect if there were at least three studies with similar populations, periods of follow-up while in PICU, and adjustment variables., Results: We identified 124 studies of which 114 reported counts of deaths by males and females which gave a population of 278,274 children for analysis, involving 121,800 (44%) females and 156,474 males (56%). The number of deaths and mortality rate for females were 5,614 (4.61%), and for males 6,828 (4.36%). In the pooled analysis, the odds ratio of female to male mortality was 1.06 [1.01 to 1.11] for the fixed effect model, and 1.10 [1.00 to 1.21] for the random effects model., Discussion: Overall, males have a higher admission rate to PCU, and potentially lower overall mortality in PICU than females., Systematic Review Registration: www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.php?RecordID=203009, identifier (CRD42020203009)., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (© 2023 Almossawi, Friend, Palla, Feltbower, Sardo-Infirri, O'Brien, Harron, Nadel, Saunders and De Stavola.)
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- 2023
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45. Trends in survival of children with severe congenital heart defects by gestational age at birth: A population-based study using administrative hospital data for England.
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Gimeno L, Brown K, Harron K, Peppa M, Gilbert R, and Blackburn R
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- Infant, Newborn, Female, Humans, Child, Child, Preschool, Gestational Age, Proportional Hazards Models, England epidemiology, Registries, Heart Defects, Congenital
- Abstract
Background: Children with congenital heart defects (CHD) are twice as likely as their peers to be born preterm (<37 weeks' gestation), yet descriptions of recent trends in long-term survival by gestational age at birth (GA) are lacking., Objectives: To quantify changes in survival to age 5 years of children in England with severe CHD by GA., Methods: We estimated changes in survival to age five of children with severe CHD and all other children born in England between April 2004 and March 2016, overall and by GA-group using linked hospital and mortality records., Results: Of 5,953,598 livebirths, 5.7% (339,080 of 5,953,598) were born preterm, 0.35% (20,648 of 5,953,598) died before age five and 3.6 per 1000 (21,291 of 5,953,598) had severe CHD. Adjusting for GA, under-five mortality rates fell at a similar rate between 2004-2008 and 2012-2016 for children with severe CHD (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 0.79, 95% CI 0.71, 0.88) and all other children (HR 0.78, 95% CI 0.76, 0.81). For children with severe CHD, overall survival to age five increased from 87.5% (95% CI 86.6, 88.4) in 2004-2008 to 89.6% (95% CI 88.9, 90.3) in 2012-2016. There was strong evidence for better survival in the ≥39-week group (90.2%, 95% CI 89.1, 91.2 to 93%, 95% CI 92.4, 93.9), weaker evidence at 24-31 and 37-38 weeks and no evidence at 32-36 weeks. We estimate that 51 deaths (95% CI 24, 77) per year in children with severe CHD were averted in 2012-2016 compared to what would have been the case had 2004-2008 mortality rates persisted., Conclusions: Nine out of 10 children with severe CHD in 2012-2016 survived to age five. The small improvement in survival over the study period was driven by increased survival in term children. Most children with severe CHD are reaching school age and may require additional support by schools and healthcare services., (© 2023 The Authors. Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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46. Using administrative data to assess early-life policies.
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Harron K and Woodman J
- Abstract
Competing Interests: We declare no competing interests.
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- 2023
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47. Study protocol: evaluation of the 0-5 public health investment in England - a mixed-methods study integrating analyses of national linked administrative data with in-depth case studies.
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Harron K, Cavallaro FL, Bunting C, Clery A, Kendall S, Cassidy R, Atkins J, Saloniki EC, Bedford H, and Woodman J
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Family, England, Parents, Public Health, Pediatric Obesity
- Abstract
Introduction: Health visiting is a long-established, nationally implemented programme that works with other services at a local level to improve the health and well-being of children and families. To maximise the impact and efficiency of the health visiting programme, policy-makers and commissioners need robust evidence on the costs and benefits of different levels and types of health visiting, for different families, in different local contexts., Methods and Analysis: This mixed-methods study will analyse individual-level health visiting data for 2018/2019 and 2019/2020 linked with longitudinal data from children's social care, hospitals and schools to estimate the association of number and type of health visiting contacts with a range of children and maternal outcomes. We will also use aggregate local authority data to estimate the association between local models of health visiting and area-level outcomes. Outcomes will include hospitalisations, breast feeding, vaccination, childhood obesity and maternal mental health. Where possible, outcomes will be valued in monetary terms, and we will compare total costs to total benefits of different health visiting service delivery models. Qualitative case studies and extensive stakeholder input will help explain the quantitative analyses and interpret the results in the context of local policy, practice and circumstance., Ethics and Dissemination: The University College London Research Ethics Committee approved this study (ref 20561/002). Results will be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal and findings will be shared and debated with national policy-makers, commissioners and managers of health visiting services, health visitors and parents., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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48. Linkage of multiple electronic health record datasets using a 'spine linkage' approach compared with all 'pairwise linkages'.
- Author
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Blake HA, Sharples LD, Harron K, van der Meulen JH, and Walker K
- Subjects
- Humans, Medical Record Linkage methods, Hospitals, Hospitalization, Electronic Health Records, Colorectal Neoplasms
- Abstract
Background: Methods for linking records between two datasets are well established. However, guidance is needed for linking more than two datasets. Using all 'pairwise linkages'-linking each dataset to every other dataset-is the most inclusive, but resource-intensive, approach. The 'spine' approach links each dataset to a designated 'spine dataset', reducing the number of linkages, but potentially reducing linkage quality., Methods: We compared the pairwise and spine linkage approaches using real-world data on patients undergoing emergency bowel cancer surgery between 31 October 2013 and 30 April 2018. We linked an administrative hospital dataset (Hospital Episode Statistics; HES) capturing patients admitted to hospitals in England, and two clinical datasets comprising patients diagnosed with bowel cancer and patients undergoing emergency bowel surgery., Results: The spine linkage approach, with HES as the spine dataset, created an analysis cohort of 15 826 patients, equating to 98.3% of the 16 100 patients identified using the pairwise linkage approach. There were no systematic differences in patient characteristics between these analysis cohorts. Associations of patient and tumour characteristics with mortality, complications and length of stay were not sensitive to the linkage approach. When eligibility criteria were applied before linkage, spine linkage included 14 509 patients (90.0% compared with pairwise linkage)., Conclusion: Spine linkage can be used as an efficient alternative to pairwise linkage if case ascertainment in the spine dataset and data quality of linkage variables are high. These aspects should be systematically evaluated in the nominated spine dataset before spine linkage is used to create the analysis cohort., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association.)
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- 2023
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49. Gestational age at birth, chronic conditions and school outcomes: a population-based data linkage study of children born in England.
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Libuy N, Gilbert R, Mc Grath-Lone L, Blackburn R, Etoori D, and Harron K
- Subjects
- Female, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Child, Infant, Child, Preschool, Gestational Age, England epidemiology, Schools, Infant, Premature, Premature Birth epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: We aimed to generate evidence about child development measured through school attainment and provision of special educational needs (SEN) across the spectrum of gestational age, including for children born early term and >41 weeks of gestation, with and without chronic health conditions., Methods: We used a national linked dataset of hospital and education records of children born in England between 1 September 2004 and 31 August 2005. We evaluated school attainment at Key Stage 1 (KS1; age 7) and Key Stage 2 (KS2; age 11) and any SEN by age 11. We stratified analyses by chronic health conditions up to age 2, and size-for-gestation, and calculated population attributable fractions (PAF)., Results: Of 306 717 children, 5.8% were born <37 weeks gestation and 7.0% had a chronic condition. The percentage of children not achieving the expected level at KS1 increased from 7.6% at 41 weeks, to 50.0% at 24 weeks of gestation. A similar pattern was seen at KS2. SEN ranged from 29.0% at 41 weeks to 82.6% at 24 weeks. Children born early term (37-38 weeks of gestation) had poorer outcomes than those born at 40 weeks; 3.2% of children with SEN were attributable to having a chronic condition compared with 2.0% attributable to preterm birth., Conclusions: Children born with early identified chronic conditions contribute more to the burden of poor school outcomes than preterm birth. Evaluation is needed of how early health characteristics can be used to improve preparation for education, before and at entry to school., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association.)
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- 2023
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50. Leveraging Administrative Data to Better Understand and Address Child Maltreatment: A Scoping Review of Data Linkage Studies.
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Soneson E, Das S, Burn AM, van Melle M, Anderson JK, Fazel M, Fonagy P, Ford T, Gilbert R, Harron K, Howarth E, Humphrey A, Jones PB, and Moore A
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Risk Factors, Social Work, Information Storage and Retrieval, Australia, Child Abuse prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: This scoping review aimed to overview studies that used administrative data linkage in the context of child maltreatment to improve our understanding of the value that data linkage may confer for policy, practice, and research., Methods: We searched MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, and ERIC electronic databases in June 2019 and May 2020 for studies that linked two or more datasets (at least one of which was administrative in nature) to study child maltreatment. We report findings with numerical and narrative summary., Results: We included 121 studies, mainly from the United States or Australia and published in the past decade. Data came primarily from social services and health sectors, and linkage processes and data quality were often not described in sufficient detail to align with current reporting guidelines. Most studies were descriptive in nature and research questions addressed fell under eight themes: descriptive epidemiology, risk factors, outcomes, intergenerational transmission, predictive modelling, intervention/service evaluation, multi-sector involvement, and methodological considerations/advancements., Conclusions: Included studies demonstrated the wide variety of ways in which data linkage can contribute to the public health response to child maltreatment. However, how research using linked data can be translated into effective service development and monitoring, or targeting of interventions, is underexplored in terms of privacy protection, ethics and governance, data quality, and evidence of effectiveness.
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- 2023
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