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Data resource: Children receiving care and support and children in need, administrative records in Wales

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Data resource: Children receiving care and support and children in need, administrative records in Wales. / Lee, A.; Elliott, M.; Scourfield, J. et al.
In: International Journal of Population Data Science, Vol. 7, No. 1, 8, 09.05.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Lee, A, Elliott, M, Scourfield, J, Bedston, S, Broadhust, K, Ford, DV & Griffiths, LJ 2022, 'Data resource: Children receiving care and support and children in need, administrative records in Wales', International Journal of Population Data Science, vol. 7, no. 1, 8. https://doi.org/10.23889/IJPDS.V7I1.1694

APA

Lee, A., Elliott, M., Scourfield, J., Bedston, S., Broadhust, K., Ford, D. V., & Griffiths, L. J. (2022). Data resource: Children receiving care and support and children in need, administrative records in Wales. International Journal of Population Data Science, 7(1), Article 8. https://doi.org/10.23889/IJPDS.V7I1.1694

Vancouver

Lee A, Elliott M, Scourfield J, Bedston S, Broadhust K, Ford DV et al. Data resource: Children receiving care and support and children in need, administrative records in Wales. International Journal of Population Data Science. 2022 May 9;7(1):8. doi: 10.23889/IJPDS.V7I1.1694

Author

Lee, A. ; Elliott, M. ; Scourfield, J. et al. / Data resource : Children receiving care and support and children in need, administrative records in Wales. In: International Journal of Population Data Science. 2022 ; Vol. 7, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{113137a4e613419289c0ac9c3ff63d0f,
title = "Data resource: Children receiving care and support and children in need, administrative records in Wales",
abstract = "Introduction: In Wales, the Children in Need (CIN) dataset includes information relating to needs of children and social care support. Before the Social Services and Well-being (Wales) Act 2014 came into force in April 2016, this data collection was named the Children in Need census, changing to Children Receiving Care and Support (CRCS) after this date to reflect better the children eligible for inclusion. This paper describes these datasets, their potential for research and their limitations. We describe data that researchers can access via the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank and exploratory linkages made to health records.Methods: CIN and CRCS data were transferred to the SAIL Databank using a standardised approach to provide de-identified data with Anonymised Linking Fields (ALF) for successfully matched records. The linkage method relies on the use of Unique Pupil Numbers (UPN). As such, no records are currently available for children without a UPN, which includes most under age three. ALFs enabled linkage to individual-level health data within SAIL. Health service use was compared to non-CIN/CRCS populations.Results: CRCS data held within the SAIL Databank comprises 25,972 records, 81% of the total number of records reported by the Welsh Government. The CIN data contains 108,449 records, 79% of the Welsh Government's records for this data collection. Health service use of children in need, and children receiving care and support, was roughly equal to that of the non-CIN/CRCS population, except GP visits, where children in need had fewer consultations, and children receiving care and support had more consultations than the comparison population.Conclusion: Researchers can access Welsh CIN and CRCS datasets through the SAIL Databank, enabling research opportunities. Work is ongoing to improve records and to understand better the health and health service use among children captured by CIN and CRCS censuses.",
keywords = "social care, administrative data, data linkage, children",
author = "A. Lee and M. Elliott and J. Scourfield and S. Bedston and K. Broadhust and D.V. Ford and L.J. Griffiths",
year = "2022",
month = may,
day = "9",
doi = "10.23889/IJPDS.V7I1.1694",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "International Journal of Population Data Science",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Data resource

T2 - Children receiving care and support and children in need, administrative records in Wales

AU - Lee, A.

AU - Elliott, M.

AU - Scourfield, J.

AU - Bedston, S.

AU - Broadhust, K.

AU - Ford, D.V.

AU - Griffiths, L.J.

PY - 2022/5/9

Y1 - 2022/5/9

N2 - Introduction: In Wales, the Children in Need (CIN) dataset includes information relating to needs of children and social care support. Before the Social Services and Well-being (Wales) Act 2014 came into force in April 2016, this data collection was named the Children in Need census, changing to Children Receiving Care and Support (CRCS) after this date to reflect better the children eligible for inclusion. This paper describes these datasets, their potential for research and their limitations. We describe data that researchers can access via the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank and exploratory linkages made to health records.Methods: CIN and CRCS data were transferred to the SAIL Databank using a standardised approach to provide de-identified data with Anonymised Linking Fields (ALF) for successfully matched records. The linkage method relies on the use of Unique Pupil Numbers (UPN). As such, no records are currently available for children without a UPN, which includes most under age three. ALFs enabled linkage to individual-level health data within SAIL. Health service use was compared to non-CIN/CRCS populations.Results: CRCS data held within the SAIL Databank comprises 25,972 records, 81% of the total number of records reported by the Welsh Government. The CIN data contains 108,449 records, 79% of the Welsh Government's records for this data collection. Health service use of children in need, and children receiving care and support, was roughly equal to that of the non-CIN/CRCS population, except GP visits, where children in need had fewer consultations, and children receiving care and support had more consultations than the comparison population.Conclusion: Researchers can access Welsh CIN and CRCS datasets through the SAIL Databank, enabling research opportunities. Work is ongoing to improve records and to understand better the health and health service use among children captured by CIN and CRCS censuses.

AB - Introduction: In Wales, the Children in Need (CIN) dataset includes information relating to needs of children and social care support. Before the Social Services and Well-being (Wales) Act 2014 came into force in April 2016, this data collection was named the Children in Need census, changing to Children Receiving Care and Support (CRCS) after this date to reflect better the children eligible for inclusion. This paper describes these datasets, their potential for research and their limitations. We describe data that researchers can access via the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank and exploratory linkages made to health records.Methods: CIN and CRCS data were transferred to the SAIL Databank using a standardised approach to provide de-identified data with Anonymised Linking Fields (ALF) for successfully matched records. The linkage method relies on the use of Unique Pupil Numbers (UPN). As such, no records are currently available for children without a UPN, which includes most under age three. ALFs enabled linkage to individual-level health data within SAIL. Health service use was compared to non-CIN/CRCS populations.Results: CRCS data held within the SAIL Databank comprises 25,972 records, 81% of the total number of records reported by the Welsh Government. The CIN data contains 108,449 records, 79% of the Welsh Government's records for this data collection. Health service use of children in need, and children receiving care and support, was roughly equal to that of the non-CIN/CRCS population, except GP visits, where children in need had fewer consultations, and children receiving care and support had more consultations than the comparison population.Conclusion: Researchers can access Welsh CIN and CRCS datasets through the SAIL Databank, enabling research opportunities. Work is ongoing to improve records and to understand better the health and health service use among children captured by CIN and CRCS censuses.

KW - social care

KW - administrative data

KW - data linkage

KW - children

U2 - 10.23889/IJPDS.V7I1.1694

DO - 10.23889/IJPDS.V7I1.1694

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35719716

VL - 7

JO - International Journal of Population Data Science

JF - International Journal of Population Data Science

IS - 1

M1 - 8

ER -