The Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort: a national, linked data resource for environmental child health research

Alister Baird, Emilie Courtin, Steven Cummins, Samantha Hajna, Vahé Nafilyan, Alison Macfarlane, Jess Walkeden, Pia Hardelid
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 Objectives & ApproachThe Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will be a new, linked national data resource for England currently being developing by researchers from UCL, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London School of Economics and Political Science, Brock University, and City, University of London in collaboration with the Office for National Statistics (ONS), and funded by Administrative Data Research-UK (ADR-UK). The Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will be a de-identified and annually updated national birth cohort of all children born in England from 2006 onwards – around 10.5 million children until 2023. The cohort will be constructed using linked administrative data from vital registration (live and stillbirth, and death registration), Census (housing and socio-economic indicators), health (hospital contacts, mental health referrals, and community dispensing data), and education (key stage results, special educational needs, absenteeism). Environmental exposure data can be securely linked to the Cohort via longitudinal residential unique property reference numbers (UPRNs) and postcodes from the Personal Demographic Service, and school location from education records.
 Relevance to Digital FootprintsThe Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will, for the first time, link health, education, Census and environmental data at national level in England. It will allow researchers to integrate data on local environments, including physical characteristics (such as temperature, building energy efficiency, or greenspace access) or the social environment (including proximity to food outlets, or services like libraries) with individual level data on health and education outcomes in children. This will be done using the ONS’s 5 safes framework, ensuring highest standards of data security and confidentiality.
 ResultsThe Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will be constructed using administrative datasets, including national linked vital statistics, health, education and Census data from multiple data providers (ONS, NHS England and Department for Education), combined with small-area level environmental data for England. Together, these datasets allow detailed analyses of the impact of environmental exposures on health and education outcomes in children, with robust confounder adjustment. The Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will be made available in a de-identified format in the ONS Secure Research Service (SRS).
 Conclusions & ImplicationsThe Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will provide researchers secure access to a national data resource integrating environmental and administrative health and education data, for child public health research.","PeriodicalId":132937,"journal":{"name":"International Journal for Population Data Science","volume":"458 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal for Population Data Science","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.23889/ijpds.v8i3.2291","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Introduction & BackgroundEvidence is mounting that children’s physical environment (e.g. in and around the home, school, and neighbourhood) is critical for their long-term health and education. Early life exposure to factors such as indoor and outdoor air pollution, or a lack of access to greenspaces are associated with the development of long-term health conditions such as asthma or mental health problems. Local and central government in England are implementing numerous policies to improve air quality and housing, and mitigate climate change. Further, England has seen large scale changes to local service provision (including childcare and libraries) due to austerity policies and the COVID-19 pandemic. Currently, there is no national, linked data resource for England that allows research into how the local environment impacts children’s health and education. Objectives & ApproachThe Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will be a new, linked national data resource for England currently being developing by researchers from UCL, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London School of Economics and Political Science, Brock University, and City, University of London in collaboration with the Office for National Statistics (ONS), and funded by Administrative Data Research-UK (ADR-UK). The Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will be a de-identified and annually updated national birth cohort of all children born in England from 2006 onwards – around 10.5 million children until 2023. The cohort will be constructed using linked administrative data from vital registration (live and stillbirth, and death registration), Census (housing and socio-economic indicators), health (hospital contacts, mental health referrals, and community dispensing data), and education (key stage results, special educational needs, absenteeism). Environmental exposure data can be securely linked to the Cohort via longitudinal residential unique property reference numbers (UPRNs) and postcodes from the Personal Demographic Service, and school location from education records. Relevance to Digital FootprintsThe Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will, for the first time, link health, education, Census and environmental data at national level in England. It will allow researchers to integrate data on local environments, including physical characteristics (such as temperature, building energy efficiency, or greenspace access) or the social environment (including proximity to food outlets, or services like libraries) with individual level data on health and education outcomes in children. This will be done using the ONS’s 5 safes framework, ensuring highest standards of data security and confidentiality. ResultsThe Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will be constructed using administrative datasets, including national linked vital statistics, health, education and Census data from multiple data providers (ONS, NHS England and Department for Education), combined with small-area level environmental data for England. Together, these datasets allow detailed analyses of the impact of environmental exposures on health and education outcomes in children, with robust confounder adjustment. The Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will be made available in a de-identified format in the ONS Secure Research Service (SRS). Conclusions & ImplicationsThe Kids’ Environment and Health Cohort will provide researchers secure access to a national data resource integrating environmental and administrative health and education data, for child public health research.
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儿童环境与健康队列:儿童环境健康研究的全国性关联数据资源
介绍,背景越来越多的证据表明,儿童的物理环境(如家庭、学校和社区内部及其周围)对他们的长期健康和教育至关重要。生命早期暴露于室内外空气污染等因素,或缺乏进入绿色空间的机会,与哮喘或精神健康问题等长期健康状况的发展有关。英格兰的地方和中央政府正在实施许多政策,以改善空气质量和住房,并减缓气候变化。此外,由于紧缩政策和COVID-19大流行,英格兰的地方服务提供(包括儿童保育和图书馆)发生了大规模变化。目前,英格兰没有全国性的、相互关联的数据资源来研究当地环境对儿童健康和教育的影响。目标,儿童环境与健康队列将是英国一个新的、相互关联的国家数据资源,目前由伦敦大学学院、伦敦卫生与热带医学学院、伦敦政治经济学院、布洛克大学和伦敦城市大学的研究人员与英国国家统计局(ONS)合作开发,并由英国行政数据研究中心(ADR-UK)资助。“儿童环境和健康队列”将是一个不确定的、每年更新的全国出生队列,涵盖自2006年以来在英格兰出生的所有儿童——到2023年约有1050万儿童。该队列将使用相关的行政数据构建,这些数据来自生命登记(活产和死产以及死亡登记)、人口普查(住房和社会经济指标)、健康(医院联系、心理健康转诊和社区配药数据)和教育(关键阶段结果、特殊教育需求、缺勤)。环境暴露数据可以通过纵向住宅唯一财产参考号码(uprn)和个人人口统计服务的邮政编码,以及教育记录中的学校位置,安全地与队列相关联。与数字足迹相关儿童环境与健康队列将首次在英格兰全国范围内将健康、教育、人口普查和环境数据联系起来。它将允许研究人员将当地环境的数据,包括物理特征(如温度、建筑能效或绿地通道)或社会环境(包括食品销售点或图书馆等服务的邻近程度),与儿童健康和教育成果的个人层面数据整合在一起。这将使用国家统计局的5个安全框架来完成,确保最高标准的数据安全和机密性。 儿童环境与健康队列将使用管理数据集构建,包括来自多个数据提供商(ONS、NHS英格兰和教育部)的国家相关生命统计数据、健康、教育和人口普查数据,以及英格兰小区域环境数据。总之,这些数据集可以详细分析环境暴露对儿童健康和教育结果的影响,并进行稳健的混杂因素调整。儿童环境和健康队列将在国家统计局安全研究服务(SRS)中以不确定的格式提供。结论,儿童环境与健康队列将为研究人员提供安全访问整合环境和行政卫生与教育数据的国家数据资源,用于儿童公共卫生研究。
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