Addressing the challenges of cross‐jurisdictional data linkage between a national clinical quality registry and government‐held health data |
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Authors: | Nadine E. Andrew Vijaya Sundararajan Amanda G. Thrift Monique F. Kilkenny Judith Katzenellenbogen Felicity Flack Melina Gattellari James H. Boyd Phil Anderson Brenda Grabsch Natasha A. Lannin Trisha Johnston Ying Chen Dominique A. Cadilhac |
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Affiliation: | 1. Stroke & Ageing Research, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University, Victoria;2. Department of Medicine, St. Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne University, Victoria;3. Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, Heidelberg, Victoria;4. Western Australian Centre for Rural HealthThe University of Western Australia;5. Telethon Kids InstituteThe University of Western Australia;6. South Western Sydney Clinical SchoolUniversity of New South Wales;7. Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research, New South Wales;8. Population Health Research Network Centre for Data Linkage, Centre for Population Health Research, Curtin University, Western Australia;9. Data Linkage Unit, Australian Institute of Health and WelfareAustralian Capital Territory;10. Faculty of HealthUniversity of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory;11. School of Allied Health, College of Science, Health and Engineering, La Trobe University, Victoria;12. Health Statistics BranchQueensland Department of Health;13. Victorian Data Linkages, Department of Health and Human Services, Victoria |
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Abstract: | Objective: To describe the challenges of obtaining state and nationally held data for linkage to a non‐government national clinical registry. Methods: We reviewed processes negotiated to achieve linkage between the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry (AuSCR), the National Death Index, and state held hospital data. Minutes from working group meetings, national workshop meetings, and documented communications with health department staff were reviewed and summarised. Results: Time from first application to receipt of data was more than two years for most state data‐sets. Several challenges were unique to linkages involving identifiable data from a non‐government clinical registry. Concerns about consent, the re‐identification of data, duality of data custodian roles and data ownership were raised. Requirements involved the development of data flow methods, separating roles and multiple governance and ethics approvals. Approval to link death data presented the fewest barriers. Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first time in Australia that person‐level data from a clinical quality registry has been linked to hospital and mortality data across multiple Australian jurisdictions. Implications for Public Health: The administrative load of obtaining linked data makes projects such as this burdensome but not impossible. An improved national centralised strategy for data linkage in Australia is urgently needed. |
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Keywords: | data linkage clinical registry health data |
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