Context: The Centre for Health Record Linkage (CHeReL) was established in 2006 as a dedicated health and human services data linkage facility for two Australian jurisdictions, New South Wales and the geographically-nested Australian Capital Territory. The two jurisdictions have their own Governments and separate Health and Human Service systems. Purpose and Operations: The primary purpose of the CHeReL is to make linked administrative and routinely collected health data available to researchers and government within relevant regulatory and governance frameworks. The CHeReL's data governance and technical operations draw on international best practice and have been refined by learnings from other data linkage centres. Outcomes: Over twelve years of operation, more than 2,320 unique investigators from 140 institutions have used the CHeReL, producing 615 publications in peer-reviewed literature. A robust pipeline of new development is expected to further amplify the use of linked data for cutting edge medical research and support a vision of data-informed policy and data-driven government services.
CITATION STYLE
Irvine, K., Hall, R., & Taylor, L. (2019). A profile of the centre for health record linkage. International Journal of Population Data Science, 4(2). https://doi.org/10.23889/ijpds.v4i2.1142
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.