检验关联调查和行政数据的质量和人口代表性:使用 1958 年国家儿童发展研究和医院事件统计关联数据的指导和说明

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Richard Silverwood, Nasir Rajah, Lisa Calderwood, Bianca De Stavola, Katie Harron, George Ploubidis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言近年来,调查数据与行政数据之间的联系越来越多。评估此类数据关联的质量对于确定后续研究的可靠性非常重要。我们的目标是描述一套可通用的方法,用于评估关联调查和行政数据的关联质量和人口代表性,当关联数据的用户不参与关联过程时,这些方法仍然是可行的。我们自始至终强调纵向调查数据所特有的问题。我们建议的方法涵盖以下几个方面:i) 连接率;ii) 响应选择、连接同意和成功连接;iii) 连接质量;以及 iv) 连接数据的人口代表性。我们使用 1958 年全国儿童发展研究(NCDS;1958 年单周在英国出生的最初 17415 人的队列)和医院事件统计(Hospital Episode Statistics,HES)数据库(包含有关英格兰国家医疗服务体系医院的入院、事故和急诊就诊以及门诊预约的重要信息)之间的最新链接来说明这些方法。结果我们的说明性分析表明,NCDS-HES 数据的链接质量很高,就我们评估的单一维度而言,链接样本保持了极好的人口代表性。我们还希望通过提供使用链接的 NCDS-HES 数据进行的说明性分析,提高使用这一特定链接数据资源进行研究的质量和透明度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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
IntroductionRecent 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). ObjectivesWe 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. MethodsOur 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). ResultsOur 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. ConclusionsThrough 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.
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CiteScore
2.50
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0.00%
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386
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20 weeks
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