Back to Search
Start Over
Factors affecting access to administrative health data for research in Canada: a study protocol
- Source :
- International Journal of Population Data Science, International Journal of Population Data Science, Vol 6, Iss 1 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- IntroductionIn Canada, most provinces have established administrative health data repositories to facilitate access to these data for research. Anecdotally, researchers have described delays and substantial inter-provincial variations in the timeliness of data access approvals and receipt of data. Currently, the reasons for these delays and variations in timeliness are not well understood. This paper provides a study protocol for (1) identifying the factors affecting access to administrative health data for research within select Canadian provinces, and (2) comparing factors across provinces to assess whether and how they contribute to inter-provincial variations in access to administrative health data for research. MethodsA qualitative, multiple-case study research design will be used. Three cases will be included, representing three different provinces. For each case, data will be collected from documents and interviews. Specifically, interviews will be carried out with (1) research stakeholders, and (2) regulatory stakeholders (10 individuals/group*,2 groups/province * 3 provinces =$ 60). During within-case analysis, interview data for each stakeholder group will be analyzed separately using constant comparative analysis. Document analysis will occur iteratively, and will inform interview guide adaptation, and supplement interview data. Cross-case analysis will involve systematic comparison of findings across cases. DiscussionThis study represents the first in-depth examination of access to administrative health data in Canada. The main outcome will be an overarching mid-range theory explaining inter-provincial variations in access to administrative health data in Canada. This theory will be strengthened by the inclusion of the perspectives of both researchers and those involved in the regulation of data access. The findings from this study may be used to improve equitable and timely access to administrative health data across provinces, and may be transferable to other jurisdictions where barriers to access to administrative health data have been reported.
- Subjects :
- Receipt
Protocol (science)
Demography. Population. Vital events
Canada
Information Systems and Management
Databases, Factual
business.industry
Big data
Health Informatics
Public relations
Interview data
Health data
Access to Information
Data access
Research Design
big data
Humans
HB848-3697
Business
Inclusion (education)
qualitative research
Information Systems
Demography
Qualitative research
Population Data Science
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 23994908
- Volume :
- 6
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International journal of population data science
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b1fc46cd7487f114a08893320a2ede80