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research
Consenting to health record linkage: evidence from a multi-purpose longitudinal survey of a general population
Authors
AR Tate
Dr Foster Unit
+17 more
E Singer
Emanuela Sala
Gundi Knies
I Ajzen
JA Olson
JLS Sauver
Jonathan Burton
KM Dunn
ME Kho
N Huang
PL Ritter
R Baker
SA Newell
SH Woolf
StataCorp
Y Gerber
Y Okura
Publication date
1 January 2012
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Background: The British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) is the first long-running UK longitudinal survey with a non-medical focus and a sample covering the whole age range to have asked for permission to link to a range of administrative health records. This study determines whether informed consent led to selection bias and reflects on the value of the BHPS linked with health records for epidemiological research. Methods. Multivariate logistical regression is used, with whether the respondent gave consent to data linkage or not as the dependent variable. Independent variables were entered as four blocks; (i) a set of standard demographics likely to be found in most health registration data, (ii) a broader set of socio-economic characteristics, (iii) a set of indicators of health conditions and (iv) information about the use of health services. Results: Participants aged 16-24, males and those living in England were more likely to consent. Consent is not biased with respect to socio-economic characteristics or health. Recent users of GP services are underrepresented among consenters. Conclusions: Whilst data could only be linked for a minority of BHPS participants, the BHPS offers a great range of information on people's life histories, their attitudes and behaviours making it an invaluable source for epidemiological research. © 2012 Knies et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd
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