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Linked birth cohort files for perinatal health research: California as a model for methodology and implementation

Beate Danielsen, Suzan L. Carmichael, Jeffrey B. Gould, Henry Lee

2023Annals of Epidemiology37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: Rigorous perinatal epidemiologic research depends on population-based parental and neonatal sociodemographic and clinical data. Here we describe the creation of linked birth cohort files, an enriched data source that combines information from vital records with maternal delivery and infant hospital encounter records. METHODS: Probabilistic linkage techniques were used to link vital records (i.e., birth and fetal death certificates) from the California Department of Public Health with hospital inpatient, ambulatory surgery and emergency department encounter data for mothers and infants from the California Department of Health Care Access and Information. RESULTS: From 2012 to 2018, 95% of live birth records were successfully linked to maternal and newborn hospital records while 85% of fetal death records were linked to a maternal delivery record. Overall, 93% of postnatal hospital encounters of infants (i.e., <1 year old) were matched to a linked record. CONCLUSIONS: The linked birth cohort files is a rich resource opening many possibilities for understanding perinatal health outcomes and opportunities for linkage to longitudinal, social determinant, and environmental data. To optimally use this file for research, analysts should evaluate possible shortcomings or biases of the data sources being linked.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRecord linkageCohortPopulationMedical recordEmergency departmentCohort studyPublic healthMedical emergencyPediatricsFamily medicineDemographyEnvironmental healthNursingInternal medicinePathologySociologyRadiologyHealth, Environment, Cognitive AgingGlobal Maternal and Child HealthData Quality and Management
Linked birth cohort files for perinatal health research: California as a model for methodology and implementation | Litcius