A Metadata Manifesto: The Need for Global Health Metadata

Administrative health data recorded for individual health episodes (such as births, deaths, physician visits, and hospital stays) are being widely used to study policy-relevant scientific questions about population health, health services, and quality of care. Furthermore, an increasing number of i...

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Main Authors: Gabriel E Fabreau, Evan P Minty, Danielle A Southern, Hude Quan, William A Ghali
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2018-08-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/436
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spelling doaj-f13fbbe03ed14a34b40e99564687d5152020-11-24T21:29:52ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082018-08-013110.23889/ijpds.v3i1.436A Metadata Manifesto: The Need for Global Health MetadataGabriel E FabreauEvan P MintyDanielle A Southern0Hude QuanWilliam A GhaliUniversity of Calgary Administrative health data recorded for individual health episodes (such as births, deaths, physician visits, and hospital stays) are being widely used to study policy-relevant scientific questions about population health, health services, and quality of care. Furthermore, an increasing number of international health comparisons are being undertaken with these data. An essential pre-requisite to such international comparative work is a detailed characterization of existing international health data resources, so that they can be more readily used in comparison studies across counties. A major challenge to such international comparative work is the variability across countries in the extent, content, and validity of existing administrative data holdings. Recognizing this, we have undertaken an international pilot process of compiling detailed data about data – i.e., a “meta-data catalogue” – for existing international administrative health data holdings. The methodological process for collecting these meta-data is described here, along with some general descriptive results for selected countries included in the pilot. https://ijpds.org/article/view/436metadata; ICD; International Classification of Diseases; Data holdings; Data catalogues
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabriel E Fabreau
Evan P Minty
Danielle A Southern
Hude Quan
William A Ghali
spellingShingle Gabriel E Fabreau
Evan P Minty
Danielle A Southern
Hude Quan
William A Ghali
A Metadata Manifesto: The Need for Global Health Metadata
International Journal of Population Data Science
metadata; ICD; International Classification of Diseases; Data holdings; Data catalogues
author_facet Gabriel E Fabreau
Evan P Minty
Danielle A Southern
Hude Quan
William A Ghali
author_sort Gabriel E Fabreau
title A Metadata Manifesto: The Need for Global Health Metadata
title_short A Metadata Manifesto: The Need for Global Health Metadata
title_full A Metadata Manifesto: The Need for Global Health Metadata
title_fullStr A Metadata Manifesto: The Need for Global Health Metadata
title_full_unstemmed A Metadata Manifesto: The Need for Global Health Metadata
title_sort metadata manifesto: the need for global health metadata
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Administrative health data recorded for individual health episodes (such as births, deaths, physician visits, and hospital stays) are being widely used to study policy-relevant scientific questions about population health, health services, and quality of care. Furthermore, an increasing number of international health comparisons are being undertaken with these data. An essential pre-requisite to such international comparative work is a detailed characterization of existing international health data resources, so that they can be more readily used in comparison studies across counties. A major challenge to such international comparative work is the variability across countries in the extent, content, and validity of existing administrative data holdings. Recognizing this, we have undertaken an international pilot process of compiling detailed data about data – i.e., a “meta-data catalogue” – for existing international administrative health data holdings. The methodological process for collecting these meta-data is described here, along with some general descriptive results for selected countries included in the pilot.
topic metadata; ICD; International Classification of Diseases; Data holdings; Data catalogues
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/436
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