Throughout our lives, information about our health and the care we receive is recorded and stored across various health-related databases, e.g., hospital admissions, ambulance service, cancer registry. Data linkage is a process that brings together information from different databases about the same individual, family, place or event. This process creates a chronological sequence of health events or individual 'health story' that can be combined into a much larger story about the health of people. This information can be used for research or to improve health services. This unit is suitable for health services researchers, policy makers, clinical practitioners, biostatisticians and data managers. We explain how data linkage is conducted, illustrate how data linkage can be used for research, highlighting the advantages, and the dangers and pitfalls. We describe how to design linked data studies, outline the data management steps required before analysing the data, and discuss some of the methods and issues of analysing linked data. Students will have access to data from a real data linkage and will gain hands-on experience to develop their programming skills for handling large complex dataset
Unit details and rules
Academic unit | Public Health |
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Credit points | 6 |
Prerequisites
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None |
Corequisites
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(PUBH5010 or BSTA5011 or CEPI5100) and (PUBH5211 or PUBH5217 or BSTA5004) |
Prohibitions
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None |
Assumed knowledge
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The unit assumes introductory-level programming skills in SAS or R, assumes introductory-level knowledge in epidemiology, e.g., PUBH5010 or CEPI5100, and introductory-level knowledge in biostatistics or statistics, e.g., PUBH5018 |
Available to study abroad and exchange students | No |
Teaching staff
Coordinator | Patrick Kelly (Public Health), p.kelly@sydney.edu.au |
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