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Data linkage infrastructure for cross-jurisdictional health-related research in Australia.pdf (517.04 kB)

Data linkage infrastructure for cross-jurisdictional health-related research in Australia

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-22, 02:11 authored by Boyd, JH, Ferrante, AM, O'Keefe, CM, Bass, Alfred J, Randall, SM, Semmens, JB
Background: The Centre for Data Linkage (CDL) has been established to enable national and cross-jurisdictional health-related research in Australia. It has been funded through the Population Health Research Network (PHRN), a national initiative established under the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS). This paper describes the development of the processes and methodology required to create cross-jurisdictional research infrastructure and enable aggregation of State and Territory linkages into a single linkage "map". Methods. The CDL has implemented a linkage model which incorporates best practice in data linkage and adheres to data integration principles set down by the Australian Government. Working closely with data custodians and State-based data linkage facilities, the CDL has designed and implemented a linkage system to enable research at national or cross-jurisdictional level. A secure operational environment has also been established with strong governance arrangements to maximise privacy and the confidentiality of data. Results: The development and implementation of a cross-jurisdictional linkage model overcomes a number of challenges associated with the federated nature of health data collections in Australia. The infrastructure expands Australia's data linkage capability and provides opportunities for population-level research. The CDL linkage model, infrastructure architecture and governance arrangements are presented. The quality and capability of the new infrastructure is demonstrated through the conduct of data linkage for the first PHRN Proof of Concept Collaboration project, where more than 25 million records were successfully linked to a very high quality. Conclusions: This infrastructure provides researchers and policy-makers with the ability to undertake linkage-based research that extends across jurisdictional boundaries. It represents an advance in Australia's national data linkage capabilities and sets the scene for stronger government-research collaboration.

History

Publication title

BMC Health Services Research

Volume

12

Article number

480

Number

480

Pagination

1-8

ISSN

1472-6963

Department/School

Menzies Institute for Medical Research

Publisher

Biomed Central Ltd

Place of publication

Middlesex House, 34-42 Cleveland St, London, England, W1T 4Lb

Rights statement

Copyright 2012 Biomed Central Ltd.

Repository Status

  • Open

Socio-economic Objectives

Other health not elsewhere classified

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