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Vital statistics linked birth/infant death and hospital discharge record linkage for epidemiological studies.

CPQCC Publication
TitleVital statistics linked birth/infant death and hospital discharge record linkage for epidemiological studies.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1997
AuthorsHerrchen B, Gould JB, Nesbitt TS
JournalComput Biomed Res
Volume30
Issue4
Pagination290-305
Date Published1997 Aug
ISSN0010-4809
KeywordsAlgorithms, Birth Certificates, California, Databases, Factual, Death Certificates, Epidemiologic Studies, Hospital Records, Humans, Infant Mortality, Infant, Newborn, Medical Record Linkage, Patient Discharge, Vital Statistics
Abstract

A methodology for linking vital statistics linked birth/death data and hospital discharge data is described. The resulting data set combines information on a neonate's sociodemographic characteristics, prenatal care, and mortality aspects and connects it to detailed health outcome and resource utilization data, thus establishing an extensive database for epidemiological studies. In the absence of a universal identifier common to both databases, our linkage strategy relied on using a virtual identifier based on variables common to both data sets. In the case of multiple incidences of the same virtual identifier we used secondary health status information to optimize the likelihood of linking low birth weight or premature infants in one database to infants of similar health status in the other while randomizing cases in which no secondary information was present. Applying our method to the 1992 California birth cohort, we could link 563,114 out of 571,189 eligible births (98.59%). Of these links, 91.2% were established on the basis of unique virtual identifiers. The link was internally consistent and no bias was evident when comparing variable distributions for all single live births in the vital statistics linked birth/death file and linked births in the linked vital statistics linked birth/death and hospital discharge file. Multiple imputation techniques showed that the prediction error incurred by randomization was negligible. Even though computationally intensive, our method for linking the vital statistics linked birth/death file and the hospital discharge file appeared to be effective. However, it is important to be aware of the limitations of the resulting data set, in particular the fact that it cannot be used for tracking individual cases. The method provides a database suitable for a variety of perinatal epidemiological analyses, such as descriptive studies of disease distribution in neonates, studies of the geographic distribution of disease, and studies of the relationship between risk and outcome.

DOI10.1006/cbmr.1997.1448
Alternate JournalComput Biomed Res
PubMed ID9339323