4th International Conference on Administrative Data ... · Dora Stoutzker Hall (Ground Floor)...
Transcript of 4th International Conference on Administrative Data ... · Dora Stoutzker Hall (Ground Floor)...
08:30-09:00
09:00-09:30
09:30-10:00
10:00-10:30
10:30-11:00
11:00-11:30
11:30-12:00
12:00-12:30
12:30-12:40
12:40-12:50
12:50-13:20
13:20-13:50
13:50-14:20
14:20-14:30
14:30-15:00
Themes
Rooms
15:05-15:25
15:25-15:45
15:45-16:05
16:05-16:15
Themes
Rooms
16:15-16:35
16:35-16:55
16:55-17:15
17:15-17:25
Themes
Rooms
17:25-17:45
17:45-18:05
18:05-18:25
WELCOME DRINKS & CANAPÉS RECEPTION is open to all delegates, Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor) 18:30-19:30
BREAK, Mid Morning Tea & Coffee
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
BREAK
EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKING
APPLIED RESEARCH
Migration to Scottish New Towns
and the impact on premature
mortality in Glasgow: longitudinal
analysis of linked Scottish Mental
Survey 1947 and NHS Central
Register data
Lynne Forrest
University of Edinburgh, UK
Building Statistics Canada’s
Statistical Population Register
Sylvain Cloutier
Government of Canada, CANADA
PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP CONTINUED LUNCH
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
INTRODUCTION KEYNOTE by Professor Kerina Jones, Swansea University, UK
Dora Stoutzker Hall (Ground Floor) Seligman (1st Floor) Simon Gibson (2nd Floor) Dame Shirley Bassey (2nd Floor) Rowe-Beddoe (2nd Floor)
BREAK
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS ETHICAL, LEGAL & SOCIAL
IMPLICATIONS
METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
Dora Stoutzker Hall (Ground Floor) Seligman (1st Floor) Simon Gibson (2nd Floor) Dame Shirley Bassey (2nd Floor) Rowe-Beddoe (2nd Floor)
Association between levodopa and
ischemic heart disease
Khalid Orayj
Cardiff University, UK
Epilepsy Mortality in Wales: 2005-
2017
Helen Daniels
Swansea University, UK
Using data linkage innovation and
collaboration to create a cross-
sectoral data repository for
Western Australia
Anna Ferrante
Curtin University, AUSTRALIA
Building a research partnership
between computer scientists and
health service researchers for
access and analysis of population-
level health datasets: what are we
learning?
Michael Schull
Institute for Clinical Evaluative
Sciences, CANADA
EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKING
APPLIED RESEARCH CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS ETHICAL, LEGAL &
SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS
METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
Sexual crime against children with
disabilities: a nationwide
prospective birth cohort-study
Mogens Christoffersen
The Danish Center for Social Science
Research, DENMARK
Strengthening the use of
administrative data to provide
gender statistics
Lauren Pandolfelli
United Nations International
Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF),
USA
Research Ready Data Lakes:
Protecting Privacy in Relatable Sets
Robert McMillan
Georgia State University, USA
Comparing Record Linkage
methods for real-world perinatal
and neonatal data without unique
identifiers
Christian Borgs
University of Duisburg-Essen,
GERMANY
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTSEVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKING
METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP CONTINUED
Making Data Research Ready by Administrative Data Research UK
Room 2.05 (2nd Floor)
WELCOME KEYNOTE by Professor David Ford, Swansea University, UK
PLENARY KEYNOTE by Garry Coleman, NHS Digital, England, UK
PLENARY KEYNOTE by Matthew Whittaker, Resolution Foundation, UK
PR
E-C
ON
FE
RE
NC
E W
OR
KS
HO
P
Seligman
Stud
io (1
st Flo
or)
PL
EN
AR
Y
Do
ra Stou
tzker H
all
Rowe-Beddoe (2nd Floor)
LUNCH
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
REGISTRATION
Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama Foyer
4th International Conference on Administrative Data Research
Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama, Cardiff
DAY 1 MONDAY 09 DECEMBER
Simon Gibson (2nd Floor) Dame Shirley Bassey (2nd Floor)
PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP
Making Data Research Ready by Administrative Data Research UK
Room 2.05 (2nd Floor)
WELCOME SPEECH by Professor Paul Boyle, Vice-Chancellor of Swansea University, UK
ETHICAL, LEGAL &
SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS
APPLIED RESEARCH
Assessing the impact on inequalities
in use of orthodontic services of the
introduction of an objective
measure of treatment need in
Northern Ireland
Kishan Patel
Queen University Belfast, UK
Long-term outcomes of urinary
tract infection (UTI) in childhood:
The LUCI study
Kathryn Hughes
Cardiff University, UK
Building a Canadian Data Platform
under the Strategy for Patient-
Oriented Research
Kim McGrail
University of British Columbia,
CANADA
Disclosive Data: Who uses it, why,
and what difference does it make?
Andrew Engeli
Office of National Statistics, UK
Development of an Injury Indicator
Tool to Support Policy and Practice
across Wales
Samantha Turner
Swansea University, UK
Linked government administrative
data: Public or Private?
Joe Stafford
Telethonkids, AUSTRALIA
Co-design of data collection with
participants of the Aberdeen
Children of the 1950s cohort study
Marjorie Johnston
Aberdeen University, UK
How complete, representative and
accurate is recording of child BMI in
electronic general practice records?
A record linkage study
Nicola Firman
Queen Mary University London, UK
Prevalence three ways: Comparison
of linked data from a patient
register and electronic health
records with allowance for linkage
error
James Doidge
Intensive Care National Audit and
Research Centre, UK
Pros and cons of using anonymised
linked routine data to improve
efficiency of randomised controlled
trials in healthcare: experience in
primary and emergency care
Helen Snooks
Swansea University, UK
Association between continuity of
provider-adjusted regularity of
general practitioner (GP) contact
and diabetes-related
hospitalisation: A data linkage
study combining survey and
administrative data
Rachael Moorin
Curtin University, AUSTRALIA
The Secure Anonymised
Information Linkage databank
Dementia e-cohort (SAIL-DeC)
Christian Schnier
University of Edinburgh, UK
Data intensive science and the
public good: Results of public
deliberations in British Columbia,
Canada
Kim McGrail
University of British Columbia,
CANADA
Evaluating continuity of care
incorporating a time protective
effect of general practitioner care
on diabetes related potentially
preventable hospitalisations: An
application of threshold effects
model
Ninh Ha
Curtin University, AUSTRALIA
Developing data governance
standards for using free-text data in
research (TexGov)
Kerina Jones
Swansea University, UK
Quantifying multi-morbidity in an
ethnically-diverse inner city
population: the health burden of
households
Gill Harper
Queen Mary University London, UK
A Victim-Focused Response to
Repeat Fraud and Computer Misuse
Crimes: Challenges and
Opportunities through Admin Data
Linkage
Sara Correia
Swansea University, UK
Leveraging Electronic Health
Records and Administrative
Datasets to Understand Social
Determinants of Health:
Opportunities and Challenges
Jonathan Tan
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia,
USA
Implications of socio-demographic
change in place of death in Scotland
2001-2011: an analysis of linked
census and death registration data
Iain Atherton
Edinburgh Napier University, UK
RE
GIS
TR
AT
ION
Ro
yal W
elsh C
ollege o
f Mu
sic & D
rama F
oy
er
PLENARY KEYNOTE by Leon Feinstein, Office of the Children's Commissioner, UK
Measuring and explaining the
changing nature of work - The
Linked Personnel Panel enriched
with administrative employment
data (LPP-ADIAB)
Stefanie Wolter
Institute for Employment Research
(IAB) of the German Federal
Employment Agency (BA), GERMANY
One-year readmission and
Emergency department
presentation after an epilepsy
admission in people with
intellectual disability:
a registry-linkage study
Peiwen Liao
University of New South Wales,
AUSTRALIA
The potential of linking cohort
participants to official criminal
records: a pilot study using the
Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents
and Children (ALSPAC)
Alison Teyhan
Bristol University, UK
Challenges and Principles to guide
the linkage of government
administrative data: Experiences
from the Tassie Kids project
Joe Stafford
Telethonkids, AUSTRALIA
Evaluating ATC-ICD: Assessing the
relationship between selected
medication and diseases with
machine learning
Nadine Weibrecht
Vienna University of Technology,
AUSTRIA
PA
RA
LL
EL
S
RE
GIS
TR
AT
ION
Ro
yal W
elsh C
ollege o
f Mu
sic & D
rama F
oy
er
Evaluation of the Troubled Families
Programme
Lan-Ho Man & Ralph Halliday
Ministry of Housing, Communities and
Local Government, UK
The association between mother’s
alcohol consumption during
pregnancy and their child’s
educational attainment and risk of
hospital admission by age 14
Amrita Bandyopadhyay
Swansea University, UK
Circular migration
Samaa Elsandabesee
Office of National Statistics, UK
Protecting children during child
protection research using
administrative data
Jade Hooper
University of Stirling, UK
Using record linkage to test
representativeness of an ageing
cohort
Frances Burns
Queen University Belfast, UK
Administrative Data Censuses in US
States
Amy O'Hara
Georgetown University, USA
PANEL DISCUSSION Chair by Professor David Ford, Swansea University, UK
BREAK, Afternoon Tea & Coffee, Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
Dora Stoutzker Hall (Ground Floor) Seligman (1st Floor)
Not in Employment, Education or
Training (NEET); more than a youth
policy issue
Francis Mitrou
Telethonkids, AUSTRALIA
The Office for National Statistics
Longitudinal Study
Alison Sizer
University College London, UK
Association between receipt of
social care and multimorbidity:
evidence from a population-sized
cohort in Scotland
David Henderson
Edinburgh Napier University, UK
Evaluating needs-based home
visiting support: Can administrative
data help?
Nell Warner
Cardiff University, UK
Fuel Poverty Data Linking Project
Sarah Lowe & Sian Morrison-Rees
Welsh Government & Swansea
University, UK
08:30-09:00
09:00-09:30
09:30-09:45
09:45-10:00
10:00-10:30
10:30-11:00
11:00-11:15
11:15-11:45
Themes APPLIED RESEARCH
Rooms Studio Two
(1st Floor)
11:45-12:05
IMPACT WORKSHOP by
Administrative Data
Research UK
11:45 - 12:45
12:10-12:30
12:35-12:55
13:00-14:00
Themes ETHICAL CONCEPTS APPLIED RESEARCH
RoomsRowe-Beddoe
(2nd Floor)
Rowe-Beddoe
(2nd Floor)
Studio Two
(1st Floor)
14:00-14:05 People with cancer living in
deprived areas of Wales are
more likely to have another
serious condition at diagnosis
than those in the least deprived
areas
Dyfed Wyn Huws
NHS Wales, UK
14:06-14:11
Childhood cognitive ability and
the use of long-term care in
later life
Matthew Iveson
University of Edinburgh, UK
14:12-14:17
Administrative Data as a Novel
Source of Information on Postal
Drug Delivery in Scotland: A
Spatial Analysis of Illegal
Consignment Seizure Data
Ben Matthews
University of Edinburgh, UK
14:18-14:23
Examining the link between
family health events and pupil
performance in Wales
Samuel Brown
Swansea University, UK
14:24-14:29
Common Mental Disorder
across Standard Occupational
Classifications in Northern
Ireland: an administrative data
study
Finola Ferry
Ulster University, UK
14:30-14:35
Predicting neighbourhood-level
psychiatric admission rates
using multi-level regression
with post-stratification-derived
estimates of ecological cognitive
social capital
Chris Saville
Bangor University, UK
14:36-14:41
Healthcare resource utilisation
for critical care survivors in
Wales: a population-based data
linkage study
Rowena Bailey
Swansea University, UK
14:42-14:47
Developing and evaluating
national severity distributions
for use in Burden of Disease
studies: a case study of cancers
in Scotland
Grant Wyper
NHS Scotland, UK
14:48-14:53
Selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors use in pregnancy: a
risk assessment study using
administrative pharmaceutical
data
Shaun Purkiss
La Trobe University, AUSTRALIA
15:00-15:30
Themes APPLIED RESEARCH
Rooms Studio Two
(1st Floor)
15:30-15:50
Data linkage for public health
research – the Fforestfach tyre
fire
Lloyd Evans
NHS Wales, UK
15:50-16:10
Ambient Air Pollution and
Health in Northern Ireland
Neil Rowland
Queen University Belfast, UK
16:10-16:30
Do carers care for themselves? A
population-based study
Foteini Tseliou
Cardiff University, UK
16:30-16:40
Themes APPLIED RESEARCH
Rooms Studio Two
(1st Floor)
16:40-17:00
A tale of multiple data sources:
pathways and outcomes for
infants who become looked
after in Scotland
Linda Cusworth
Lancaster University, UK
17:00-17:20
Maternal adversity and
variation in the rate of children
entering local authority care
during infancy in England: a
longitudinal ecological study
Rachel Pearson
University College London, UK
17:20-17:40
Exploratory Research on the
Health and Social Outcomes of
Public Housing
Mark Smith
University of Manitoba. CANADA
17:40-18:00
Understanding recurrent care
proceedings: Competing risks of
how mothers and fathers enter
subsequent care proceedings in
England
Stuart Bedston
Lancaster University, UK
19:00-20:30
The Office for National Statistics
Administrative Data Research
Programme
Claire Shenton & Lucy Tinkler
Office of National Statistics, UK
Social services Interventions
and the Mental Health and
Mortality of care leavers: a
population based data linkage
study in Northern Ireland and
Finland
Aideen Maguire
Queen University Belfast, UK
Spatially Enabling The Master
Linkage Map – Getting Straight
To The Point
Brian Stokes
University of Tasmania,
AUSTRALIA
Linked Administrative Data at
Statistics Canada – new data
resources for horizontal
research
Li Xue
Government of Canada, CANADA
Unleashing The Power of Your
Master Linkage Map – Is There A
Role For Business Intelligence
Tools In Supporting Data
Linkage
Brian Stokes
University of Tasmania,
AUSTRALIA
An Administrative Data
Maturity Model - Building
national administrative data
capacity to produce results for
children
Karen Carter
United Nations International
Children's Emergency Fund
(UNICEF), USA
Supporting People Data Linking
Project
Sara Lowe
Welsh Government, UK
Area Deprivation, Urbanicity
and Severe Mental Illness – A
Population-Based Linkage
Study Using Routinely Collected
Primary and Secondary Care
Data
Sze Chim Lee
Swansea University, UK
The Differential Privacy Corner:
What has the US Backed Itself
Into?
Amy O'Hara
Georgetown University, USA
High-dimensional propensity
score adjustment in HIV
research using linked
administrative health data
Taylor McLinden
University of British Columbia,
CANADA
Hidden Harms of Hypnotics: a
population based record
linkage study of psychotropic
medication and suicide risk
Ifeoma Onyeka
Queen University Belfast, UK
The Welsh Government Flying
Start Data Linking Project
Tony Whiffen & Laura Herbert
Swansea University, UK
Educational outcomes of
children in Wales with cerebral
palsy
Hywel Jones
Cardiff University, UK
Utilisation of Personal Care
Services in Scotland: the
Influence of Unpaid Carers
Elizabeth Lemmon
University of Edinburgh, UK
Gender and STEM Subject
Choice
Anne Gasteen
University of Stirling, UK
The Unmet Need for
Psychotropic Medication within
the Migrant Population of
Northern Ireland - A Record
Linkage Study
Kishan Patel
Queen University Belfast, UK
The Nuffield Family Justice
Observatory Data Partnership
Lucy Griffiths & Rhodri Johnson
Swansea University, UK
Education and health outcomes
of children treated for chronic
conditions
Michael Fleming
Glasgow University, UK
Self-harm presentation across
healthcare settings by sex in
young people
Amanda Marchant
Swansea University, UK
Born into Care: characterising
newborn babies and infants in
care proceedings in England and
Wales
Bachar Alrouh
Lancaster University, UK
Improving Data Linkage in
Government Statistics: The
National Statistician’s Quality
Review 2019
Louise Palmer
Office of National Statistics, UK
The use of Administrative Data
to combat non-response
Matthew Moore
University of Stirling, UK
Seligman
(1st Floor)
The looked-after children in
time: Creating and analysing
longitudinal data on placement
history and educational
outcomes
Gillian Raab
University of Edinburgh, UK
A data driven approach to
transforming population and
migration statistics
Adriana Castaldo
Office of National Statistics, UK
The case for integrated
transport and health
surveillance in Wales
Sarah Jones
NHS Wales, UK
Variations in the use and
availability of formal and
informal care at the end of life
over time and space
Anna Schneider
Edinburgh Napier University, UK
Depression and changes in
educational attainment using
administrative data: The role of
socio-demographic
characteristics
Alice Wickersham
Kings College London, UK
Incidence of drug-treated
chronic diseases using
administrative pharmaceutical
data
Shaun Purkiss
La Trobe University, AUSTRALIA
The New Brunswick COPD
Health Information Platform
Ted McDonald
University of New Brunswick,
CANADA
Evaluating the impact of
interventions on the future
Burden of Disease in Scotland
Grant Wyper
NHS Scotland, UK
National Therapeutic Indicators
in Scotland and Financial
Incentives
Seán Macbride-Stewart
NHS Scotland, UK
Estimates of age-specific death
rates and mortality risk using
administrative pharmaceutical
data
Shaun Purkiss
La Trobe University, AUSTRALIA
Exploiting Administrative Data
to Understand the Mental
Health of Children Known to
Services
Sarah McKenna
Queen University Belfast, UK
Measuring the Dynamic Risk of
Further Offending: A Feasibility
Study
Helen Hodges
Cardiff University, UK
The impacts of pre-
apprenticeship training for
young people
Richard Dorsett
University of Westminister, UK
The Influence of Non-Clinical
Patient Factors on Clinical
Decision Making: Uncovering the
Impact on Mental Health
Lauren Burns
Swansea University, UK
Allocating Unique Property
Reference Numbers (UPRNs) to
general practitioner-recorded
patient addresses using a
deterministic address-matching
algorithm: evaluation of
representativeness and bias in
an ethnically-diverse inner city
population
Gill Harper
Queen Mary University London, UK
iCoverT: A rich data source on
the incidence of child
maltreatment over time in
England and Wales
Michelle Degli Esposti
Oxford University, UK
Linking Pathology Datasets –
Trials and Triumphs
Brian Stokes
University of Tasmania, Australia
Using administrative data to
understand the service
interactions of people
experiencing homelessness
Hannah Browne Gott
Cardiff University, UK
The Impact of School Exclusion
on Educational Achievement:
Evidence from English
Administrative Data
Duncan McVicar
Queen University Belfast, UK
Social media engagement and
health
Alisha Davies
Public Health Wales, UK
Does physical ill-health increase
the risk of suicide? A Census-
based follow-up study of over 1
million people
Ifeoma Onyeka
Queen University Belfast, UK
Assessing the health impacts of
adults’ participation in sports:
investigating the role of
accessibility to sport facilities
Theodora Pouliou
Swansea University, UK
Measuring the burden of mental
illness and substance use and
the level and impact of health
care response in patients with
spinal trauma: a record linkage
study
Lisa Sharwood
Sydney University, AUSTRALIA
Scottish Burden of Disease
(SBOD) study: developments
and findings of local estimates
Grant Wyper
NHS Scotland, UK
Dame Shirley Bassey
(2nd Floor)
How do numbers of births in
England and Wales vary by time
of day, day of the week and
place of birth? An analysis using
linked administrative data
Alison Macfarlane
City, University of London, UK
The safety of Waterbirth in the
UK: a feasibility study of routine
data linkage – The POOL Study
Fiona Lugg
Cardiff University, UK
Is there equity of access to
revascularisation in Wales by
socioeconomic deprivation?
Lloyd Evans
NHS Wales, UK
Rowe-Beddoe
(2nd Floor)
U.S. Decennial Census
Digitization and Linkage
Project
Trent Alexander
University of Michigan, USA
Linking two administrative
datasets about looked after
children: testing feasibility and
enhancing understanding
Jade Hooper
University of Stirling, UK
Enough with the tables, we need
ideas
Antony Stevens
Brazil Ministry of Health, BRAZIL
Does the risk of poor mental
health rise before widowhood
Zhiqiang Feng
University of Edinburgh, UK
LUNCH
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKING
METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS
Dora Stoutzker Hall
(Ground Floor)
Seligman
(1st Floor)
Simon Gibson
(2nd Floor)
Dame Shirley Bassey
(2nd Floor)
Health conditions, disability
and economic inactivity in
Northern Ireland. An
administrative data study
Ana Corina Miller
Queen University Belfast, UK
Admin vs. questionnaire data:
Can we replace ‘highest
qualification’ questions with
admin data?
Stephan Tietz
Office of National Statistics, UK
Co-producing a typology for
Green and Blue spaces for a
longitudinal, national dataset of
Green and Blue spaces
Amy Mizen
Swansea University, UK
What happens after self-harm?
An exploration of self-harm and
suicide using the Northern
Ireland Registry of Self-Harm
Emma Ross
Queen University Belfast, UK
Alberta's Data and Analytic
Strategy: Leveraging Linked
Data to Drive Innovation
Larry Svenson
University of Alberta, CANADA
EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKING
Poor mental health and uptake
of disability benefits
Dermot Oreilly
Queen University Belfast, UK
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS
What happens without
population data? - The case of
Ukraine
Dorottya Molnár-Kovács
University of Debrecen,
HUNGARY
Developing a new cohort of
children born to women who
used opioids in pregnancy using
administrative data: insights
into cohort creation and early
results
Louise Marryat
University of Edinburgh, UK
A public health approach to
reducing violence: Can data
linkage help to reduce demand
on blue light services?
Susan McVie
University of Edinburgh, UK
Automatic coding of occupation
and cause-of-death records
Richard Tobin
University of Edinburgh, UK
Unlocking the potential of health
systems using privacy preserving
record linkage: A pilot project
exploring the research potential
of developing a linkable general
practice dataset
James Boyd
La Trobe University, AUSTRALIA
Household Matching for the
2021 Census
Josie Plachta and Charlie Tomlin
Office of National Statistics, UK
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTSAPPLIED RESEARCH METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKINGDora Stoutzker Hall
(Ground Floor)
Simon Gibson
(2nd Floor)
Seligman
(1st Floor)
4th International Conference on Administrative Data Research
Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama, Cardiff
DAY 2 TUESDAY 10 DECEMBER
REGISTRATION
Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama Foyer
CONFERENCE OPENING REMARKS by Prof David Ford, Swansea University, UK
CONFERENCE OPENING KEYNOTE by Rebecca Evans AM, Minister for Finance and Trefnydd, Welsh Government, Wales, UK
PLENARY KEYNOTE by John Pullinger, Former Head, Government Statistical Service (GSS) and Chief Executive, UK Statistics Authority, UK
PLENARY KEYNOTE by Betsy Stanko, Ministry of Justice's Data, Evidence and Science Board, UK
PL
EN
AR
Y
Do
ra Stou
tzker H
all
PANEL DISCUSSION Chair by Professor David Ford, Swansea University, UK
BREAK, Mid Morning Tea & Coffee
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
CONFERENCE DINNER AT CARDIFF CASTLE
City Centre, Cardiff (8 mins walk from Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama)
PA
RA
LL
EL
S
BREAK, Afternoon Tea & Coffee
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKINGAPPLIED RESEARCH METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS
BREAK
Dora Stoutzker Hall
(Ground Floor)
Seligman
(1st Floor)
Simon Gibson
(2nd Floor)
Dame Shirley Bassey
(2nd Floor)
Rowe-Beddoe
(2nd Floor)
Careers guidance provisions
and progression to post-16
education: An empirical
analysis for Wales
Katy Huxley
Cardiff University, UK
The Hazards and Rewards of
Screening Using a Population
Register: The Case of HAGIS
David Bell
University of Stirling, UK
Rowe-Beddoe
(2nd Floor)
EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKING
Careers Guidance and
Transitions to Further
Education in Wales
Katy Huxley
Cardiff University, UK
Geographical factors in access:
investigating the impact of
distance on the use of primary
care extended hours, an
administrative data study
Jen Murphy
University of Manchester, UK
Linkage of Primary Care
Prescribing Records and
Pharmacy Dispensing Records in
Asthma Controller Medications
Holly Tibble
University of Edinburgh, UK
Early-life cognitive ability and
recovery from stroke
Drew Altschul
University of Edinburgh, UK
Suicide following presentation
to emergency departments with
suicidal ideation: a population-
wide study
Emma Ross
Queen University Belfast, UK
Using Linked Administrative
Data to Measure Earnings
Mobility of Public Assistance
Recipients during the Great
Recession
Sally Wallace
Georgia State University, USA
Estimates of mortality rates in
people with diabetes and
cardiovascular disease using
administrative pharmaceutical
data
Shaun Purkiss
La Trobe University, AUSTRALIA
Combining Hungarian
Administrative Data with
Google Search Trends to Predict
Tendencies in Local Public
Health and Consumer
Behaviour
Dorottya Molnár-Kovács
University of Debrecen, HUNGARY
Building a birth cohort of births
and their outcome in England
and Wales using linkage of
administrative data
Alison Macfarlane
City, University of London, UK
APPLIED RESEARCH METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS
Integrated Data Systems in the
US: a National Survey of State
and Local Governments and
their University Partners
Adelia Jenkins
University of Pennsylvania, USA
Harnessing administrative data
for humanitarian responses
Karen Carter
United Nations International
Children's Emergency Fund
(UNICEF), USA
Increasing the understanding of
patterns of behaviours for
alcohol in Wales using R
Rhian Hughes
NHS Wales, UK
Risk factors for young people
not in education, employment
or training (NEET) using the
Scottish Longitudinal Study
Dawn Everington
University of Edinburgh, UK
Dame Shirley Bassey
(2nd Floor)
Dora Stoutzker Hall
(Ground Floor)
Simon Gibson
(2nd Floor)
The Impact of Gender and Socio-
economic Background on
Attainment in Scottish State
Secondary Schools
Anne Gasteen
University of Stirling, UK
LINKAGE: Factors in selecting a
data linkage approach
Kerina Jones
Swansea University, UK
Regulating Statistics in the Age
of Data Abundance
Catherine Bromley
UK Statistics Authority, UK
Generation Scotland - Using
Electronic Health Records for
Research
Archie Campbell
University of Edinburgh, UK
The relationship between
loneliness, social isolation and
health service usage in an older
population: an example of
administrative data linkage
using Healthy Ageing In
Scotland (HAGIS) and NHS
records
Elaine Douglas
University of Stirling, UK
One Size Doesn’t Fit All:
Administrative Data Quality
Frameworks for Production of
Official Statistics
Sara Correia
Office of National Statistics, UK
Using GIS to explore the impact
of teenager’s environments on
this physical activity, fitness
and motivation: a cross-
sectional study using data from
the ACTIVE Randomised
Control Trial
Michaela James
Swansea University, UK
Which way is up? The different pathways to
impact in devolved UK regions
This wokshop is open to all delegates
08:30-09:45
Themes METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
Rooms Studio Two
(1st Floor)
09:45-10:05
Donor-based imputation
methods for admin data: How to
replace the number of rooms
question on the Census
Stephan Tietz
Office of National Statistics, UK
10:05-10:25
An instrumental variable
approach to estimation of match
probabilities or precision in
linked data
James Doidge
Intensive Care National Audit and
Research Centre, UK
10:25-10:45
Exploratory versus experimental
design: overcoming the
prejudice of ‘data dredging’
Sarahjane Jones
Birmingham City University /
Health Foundation, UK
10:45-11:15
Themes POLICY
MAKING
METHODS CONCEPTS ETHICAL
Rooms Rowe-Beddoe
(2nd Floor)
Rowe-Beddoe
(2nd Floor)
11:15-11:35
11:35-11:55
12:00-12:30
12:30-12:45
12:45-13:00
13:00
CONFERENCE CLOSING REMARKS by Prof David Ford, Swansea University, UK
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS
Evaluating record linkage of
birth registration and
notification records to Hospital
Episode Statistics: Singleton
births in 2005 and 2006 across
England
Victoria Coathup
Oxford University, UK
Better data, better knowledge,
better society: Developing an
ideal homelessness data system
drawing on lessons from global
practice
Ian Thomas
Cardiff University, UK
Developing a training
curriculum for researchers
working with routine data:
understanding professional and
lay stakeholder priorities - The
CENTRIC Study
Fiona Lugg
Cardiff University, UK
Piloting a Safe Health
Researcher course
Louise Corti
University of Essex, UK
Data resource description:
Systemic Anti-Cancer Therapy
(SACT) Dataset
Chloe Bright
Public Health England, UK
The Emerging Crisis of Aged
Homelessness in the US: Could
Cost Avoidance in Health Care
Fund Housing Solutions?
Dennis Culhane
University of Pennsylvania, USA
Data resource description:
National Cancer Registration
Dataset in England
Katherine Henson
Public Health England, UK
BREAK, Mid Morning Tea & Coffee
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
BEST PAPER AWARD for Evidence To Support Policy Making to be presented by Dr Emma Gordon, ADR UK
(BEST PAPER AWARD is sponsored by Economic and Social Research Council's ADR UK, part of UK Research and Innovation)
END OF CONFERENCE & LUNCH-TO-GO
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
Using linked English cancer
registration data to assess
variation in diagnostic pathway
length
Clare Pearson
Cancer Research UK, UK
Overcoming the
misrepresentation of disease
burden associated with single
aggregation choropleth maps
through combining information
from many aggregations
David Whyatt
University of Western Australia,
AUSTRALIA
PA
RA
LL
EL
S
PL
EN
AR
Y
Do
ra Stou
tzker
Hall
Strategies for centering equity
and public engagement in the
ethical use of integrated
administrative data
Adelia Jenkins
University of Pennsylvania, USA
METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT
POLICY MAKING
PLENARY KEYNOTE by Stefaan Verhulst, GovLab, New York University, USA
Dora Stoutzker Hall
(Ground Floor)
Seligman
(1st Floor)
Seligman
(1st Floor)
Dame Shirley Bassey
(2nd Floor)
The prevention priority: linking
education and homelessness
data to inform policy and
practice
Peter Mackie
Cardiff University, UK
Repeatable Research
Infrastructure Enabling
Administrative Data Analysis
Dan Thayer
Swansea University, UK
An outline framework for the
efficient onward-sharing of
linked Longitudinal Population
Study and NHS Digital records
Andy Boyd
Bristol University, UK
Homelessness and health needs
in Wales
Jiao Song
Public Health Wales, UK
GRAPHITE: Geographic
Information UK Secure E-
Research Platform
Richard Fry
Swansea University, UK
METHODOLOGICAL &
ANALYTICAL ADVANCES
Identifying Military Veterans in
a Clinical Research Database
using Natural Language
Processing
Daniel Leightley
King's College London Centre for
Military Health Research, UK
ATC-ICD: enabling domain
experts to explore and evaluate
machine learning models
estimating diagnoses from filled
predictions
Florian Endel
Vienna University of Technology,
AUSTRIA
Defining Acute Kidney Injury
Episodes
Gareth Davies
Swansea University, UK
4th International Conference on Administrative Data Research
Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama, Cardiff
DAY 3 WEDNESDAY 11 DECEMBER
REGISTRATION
Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama Foyer
Dora Stoutzker Hall
(Ground Floor)
CASE STUDIES & CONCEPTS
Screening drugs for bone
fracture risk : a nation-wide
longitudinal study using the
national SNDS claims database
Emmanuel Bacry
University Paris-Dauphine,
FRANCE
InFORM: Improving care for
people who Frequently call 999:
co-production of guidance
through an Observational study
using Routine linked data and
Mixed methods
Ashra Khanom
Swansea University, UK
ETHICAL, LEGAL &
SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS
Dame Shirley Bassey
(2nd Floor)
Rowe-Beddoe
(2nd Floor)
WEDNESDAY 11 DECEMBER
08:30-09:00 30min
09:00-09:30 30min
09:30-09:45 15min
09:45-10:00 15min
10:00-10:30 30min
10:30-10:45 15min
10:45-11:15 30minBREAK, Mid Morning Tea & Coffee
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
11:15-11:30 15min
11:30-11:45 15min
11:45-12:00 15min
12:00-12:30 30min
12:30-13:00 30min
13:00-13:30 30min
13:30-14:00 30min
14:00-14:30 30min
14:30-15:00 30min
15:00-15:30 30min
15:30-16:00 30min
16:00-16:15 15min
16:15-16:30 15min
16:30-16:40 10min
16:40-17:00 10min
17:00-17:15 15min
17:15-17:30 15min
17:30-18:00 30min
18:00-18:30 30min
18:30-19:00 30min
19:00-19:30 30min
19:30-20:00 30min
20:00-20:30 30min
REGISTRATION (Foyer / Ground Floor)
PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP
Making Data Research Ready by Administrative Data Research UK
Room 2.05 (2nd Floor)
BREAK, Mid Morning Tea & Coffee Linbury Gallery (1st Floor) PARALLEL SESSIONS
PARALLEL SESSIONS
END OF CONFERENCE & LUNCH-TO-GO
REGISTRATION
(Foyer / Ground Floor)
BREAK, Mid Morning Tea & Coffee
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
IMPACT WORKSHOP by
Administrative Data Research UK
LUNCH
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
RAPID FIRE SESSIONS
REGISTRATION
(Foyer / Ground Floor)
PLENARY KEYNOTES
Dora Stoutzker Hall (Ground & 1st Floors)
CONFERENCE DINNER AT CARDIFF CASTLE
City Centre, Cardiff
(8 mins walk from Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama)
PLENARY KEYNOTES
Dora Stoutzker Hall (Ground & 1st Floors)
PARALLEL SESSIONS
BREAK, Afternoon Tea & Coffee
Lindbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
PARALLEL SESSIONS
BREAK
PARALLEL SESSIONS
MONDAY 09 DECEMBER
4th International Conference on Administrative Data Research 2019
Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama, Cardiff, Wales, UK
TUESDAY10 DECEMBER
Public Data for Public Good
PARALLEL SESSIONS
BREAK
PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP
CONTINUED
Room 2.05 (2nd Floor)
PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP
CONTINUED
Room 2.05 (2nd Floor)
BREAK, Afternoon Tea & Coffee, Lindbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
PARALLEL SESSIONS
BREAK
PARALLEL SESSIONS
WELCOME DRINKS & CANAPÉS RECEPTION is open to all delegates
(Foyer / Ground Floor)
LUNCH
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
LUNCH
Linbury Gallery (Ground Floor)
PLENARY KEYNOTES
Dora Stoutzker Hall (Ground & 1st Floors)