| Literature DB >> 16553951 |
Dorothea Nitsch1, Susan Morton, Bianca L DeStavola, Heather Clark, David A Leon.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Probabilistic record linkage is widely used in epidemiology, but studies of its validity are rare. Our aim was to validate its use to identify births to a cohort of women, being drawn from a large cohort of people born in Scotland in the early 1950s.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16553951 PMCID: PMC1473197 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-6-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Figure 1Frequency distribution of linkage scores greater than 22 used for the probabilistic linkage of females in the . The bar width is equivalent to 1.0 unit increase in linkage score. Vertical line: used cut-off score of 22.0.
Figure 2Profile of mailing questionnaires and attempts of linkage with subpopulation considered for further validation of individual births (box with double borders).
Frequency and percentages of maternal variables by linkage to the Scottish Maternity Records (SMR 2) and questionnaire response: females in the Children of the 1950's Study.
| Aberdeen | 3147 | (84) | 1052 | (56) | 368 | (72) | 2540 | (78) | 2908 | (78) | 1314 | (73) |
| Scotland, not Aberdeen | 336 | (9) | 166 | (9) | 68 | (13) | 319 | (10) | 387 | (10) | 120 | (7) |
| UK, not Scotland | 93 | (2) | 429 | (23) | 64 | (13) | 347 | (11) | 411 | (11) | 184 | (10) |
| Emigrated from UK | 36 | (1) | 97 | (5) | 1 | (0.2) | 7 | (0.2) | 8 | (0.2) | 1 | (0) |
| Other/dead/not traced | 131 | (3) | 147 | (8) | 8 | (2) | 30 | (1) | 38 | (1) | 169 | (9) |
| Non-manual | 885 | (24) | 531 | (28) | 187 | (37) | 872 | (27) | 1,059 | (28) | 352 | (20) |
| Manual | 2579 | (69) | 1207 | (64) | 295 | (58) | 2176 | (67) | 2,471 | (66) | 1239 | (69) |
| Other/missing | 279 | (7) | 153 | (8) | 27 | (5) | 195 | (6) | 222 | (6) | 197 | (11) |
| 3743 | (100) | 1891 | (100) | 509 | (100) | 3243 | (100) | 3752 | (100) | 1788 | (100) | |
aStatus at National Health Service central Register in 2003
bAccording to occupational status of participant's father at the time of the Reading survey in 1962
Frequencies and percentages of maternal variables by linkage to the Scottish Maternity Records (SMR 2) and questionnaire response: restricted to women who indicated that they were fecund and for whom linkage to SMR 2 was attempted (excluding deaths before 2000)
| Aberdeen | 2249 | (86) | 898 | (79) | 297 | (49) | 3444 | (79) |
| Scotland, not Aberdeen | 263 | (10) | 73 | (6) | 54 | (9) | 390 | (9) |
| UK, not Scotland | 66 | (3) | 27 | (2) | 247 | (41) | 340 | (8) |
| Emigrated from UK | 6 | (0.2) | 30 | (3) | 1 | (0.2) | 37 | (1) |
| Other/dead/not traced | 20 | (1) | 111 | (10) | 10 | (2) | 141 | (3) |
| Non-manual | 688 | (26) | 197 | (17) | 176 | (29) | 1061 | (24) |
| Manual | 1760 | (68) | 819 | (72) | 393 | (65) | 2972 | (68) |
| Other/missing | 156 | (6) | 123 | (11) | 40 | (7) | 319 | (7) |
| <21 | 705 | (27) | 316 | (28) | 220 | (36) | 1241 | (29) |
| 21–25 | 988 | (38) | 490 | (43) | 167 | (27) | 1645 | (38) |
| 26–30 | 630 | (24) | 235 | (21) | 149 | (24) | 1014 | (23) |
| 31–35 | 194 | (7) | 65 | (6) | 43 | (7) | 302 | (7) |
| 36–40 | 71 | (3) | 30 | (3) | 20 | (3) | 121 | (3) |
| >40 | 16 | (1) | 3 | (3) | 5 | (1) | 24 | (1) |
| NK | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) | 5 | (1) | 5 | (0.1) |
| <1971 | 187 | (7) | 69 | (6) | 80 | (13) | 336 | (8) |
| 1971–1980 | 1852 | (71) | 863 | (76) | 368 | (60) | 3083 | (71) |
| 1981–1990 | 512 | (20) | 185 | (16) | 143 | (24) | 840 | (19) |
| 1991–2000 | 53 | (2) | 22 | (2) | 18 | (3) | 93 | (2) |
| NK | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) |
aStatus at National Health Service central Register in 2003
bAccording to occupational status of participant's father at the time of the Reading survey in 1962
Women by number of identified births according to data source (restricted to women for whom SMR 2 linkage was attempted)
| Births per woman according to SMR2 linkage | |||||||||||||
| Births per woman according to questionnaire | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | With linkage to SMR2 and questionnaire | With questionnaire only, no linkage to SMR2 | |||
| 14 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 21 | (1) | ||||
| 9 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 412 | (16) | |||||
| 215 | 24 | 12 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1463 | (56) | |||||
| 70 | 94 | 12 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 555 | (21) | |||||
| 12 | 15 | 21 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 110 | (4) | |||||
| 5 | 2 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 35 | (1) | |||||
| 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 5 | (1) | |||||
| 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | (0) | |||||
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | (0) | |||||
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | (0) | ||||
| With SMR2 linkage and questionnaire | 174 (30) | 1136 (47) | 432 (18) | 90 (4) | 26 (0.1) | 3 (0) | 1 (0) | 2 (0) | 2604 (100) | (100) | |||
| With SMR2 linkage, no questionnaire | |||||||||||||
Numbers of birthsa (and corresponding median linkage scores) by whether or not there was a corresponding match between details (mother, sex, year of birth) in SMR 2 and questionnaire, classified according to differences in total number of births/mother between both sources.
| Number of births | 4166 | 160 | 604 | 4930 | |
| Number of births | 113 | 131b | 39 | 283 | |
| Number of births | 113 | 4 | 633 | 750 | |
| 2061 | 94 | 449 | 2604 | ||
a restricted to data on mothers for whom information was available from both linkage to SMR 2 and questionnaires.
bOut of 135 additional births found above the diagonal in table 3, 4 births were in fact matches according to the overall information given by the mother in the questionnaire (they specified to have children, but omitted detailed information)
n.a.: not applicable
False positive links, missed birth records and sensitivity of probabilistic record linkage by linkage cut cut-off values; females in the Children of the 1950's study linkage to SMR 2 maternity records.
| 134 | 454 | 92% | |
| 91 | 617 | 89% | |
| 68 | 775 | 86% | |
| 61 | 926 | 83% | |
| 37 | 1169 | 84% | |
| 32 | 1422 | 74% | |
| 28 | 1777 | 68% | |
| 10 | 2940 | 53% | |
| 40 | 3 | 4383 | 21% |
a Calculated only for those 2604 women where information from both sources is available and who gave birth to 5533 children in Scotland.