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Journal Article

Citation

MacLeod MC, Bray CA, Kendrick SW, Cobbe SM. Comput. Biomed. Res. 1998; 31(4): 257-270.

Affiliation

Information and Statistics Division, NHSiS, Scotland.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Academic Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9731268

Abstract

The Heartstart Scotland study collects details of all resuscitation attempts carried out by the Scottish Ambulance Service. The linkage between records for Heartstart study subjects who died before admission to a hospital and the national file of death records maintained by the Registrar General for Scotland is described. The conditions under which the Heartstart data is collected make it inevitable that the personal identifying information on which linkage must rely tends to be relatively incomplete and of low accuracy. The linkage process was able to use the best-link principle to take maximum advantage of the fact that, because the Heartstart subjects involved had died, there was an extremely high a priori probability that they would be represented on the national deaths file. In addition, although no cause of death information was recorded on the Heartstart records, a priori expectations of the distribution of causes of death among linked death records were used. Despite these enhancements, however, clerical resolution of a proportion of the potential links generated by the automatic algorithm significantly improved the accuracy of the linkage.


Language: en

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