Collection of secondary data on an individual level, e.g. from official sources, may complement primary data from questionnaires and examinations in epidemiological field studies. Retrieval of individual-level secondary data thus represents an important step to constitute a comprehensive epidemiological database: secondary health data poten-tially represent an added value for the inference of causal relationships because they provide information without recall bias. In the IDEFICS/I.Family studies, health records of routine child visits reaching back to birth as well as medical records for the prenatal period were collected. Several stud-ies suggest that both intra-uterine and early infancy growth may influence the devel-opment of overweight during childhood, adolescence and even adulthood (Poston 2012). The IDEFICS/I.Family studies were conducted in different cultural settings using a standardised protocol that sometimes needed adaptation to local peculiarities. The lat-ter was the case for the documentation of routine child visits and maternity cards that varied across countries with regard to data sources and the type of information rec-orded. This chapter summarises the methodology of retrieval and harmonisation of secondary health data in the IDEFICS/I.Family studies and describes the differences and similar-ities of these records across countries.
Pre- and postnatal factors obtained from health records.
Fabio Lauria;Annarita Formisano;
2019
Abstract
Collection of secondary data on an individual level, e.g. from official sources, may complement primary data from questionnaires and examinations in epidemiological field studies. Retrieval of individual-level secondary data thus represents an important step to constitute a comprehensive epidemiological database: secondary health data poten-tially represent an added value for the inference of causal relationships because they provide information without recall bias. In the IDEFICS/I.Family studies, health records of routine child visits reaching back to birth as well as medical records for the prenatal period were collected. Several stud-ies suggest that both intra-uterine and early infancy growth may influence the devel-opment of overweight during childhood, adolescence and even adulthood (Poston 2012). The IDEFICS/I.Family studies were conducted in different cultural settings using a standardised protocol that sometimes needed adaptation to local peculiarities. The lat-ter was the case for the documentation of routine child visits and maternity cards that varied across countries with regard to data sources and the type of information rec-orded. This chapter summarises the methodology of retrieval and harmonisation of secondary health data in the IDEFICS/I.Family studies and describes the differences and similar-ities of these records across countries.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.