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Research Access to and Uses of Administrative Data Byron G Spencer McMaster University Prepared for the CRDCN Conference 2012 Evidence-Based Policy Formation.

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Presentation on theme: "Research Access to and Uses of Administrative Data Byron G Spencer McMaster University Prepared for the CRDCN Conference 2012 Evidence-Based Policy Formation."— Presentation transcript:

1 Research Access to and Uses of Administrative Data Byron G Spencer McMaster University Prepared for the CRDCN Conference 2012 Evidence-Based Policy Formation and Evaluation University of New Brunswick, Fredericton October 22-24, 2012

2 Research context Individual-level records has become the gold standard for empirical research – Whether from survey data (e.g., StatCan) – Or administrative data (e.g., health, tax, education) Especially longitudinal records But, roadblocks to access

3 Advantages / Disadvantages Admin records can provide – Long time series – Reliable information But – Limited! – Education, marital status, occupation, income?

4 Combine! Can link individual income tax returns over time to survey (or census) information at a point in time Or link health records to CCHS Or link admin records with neighbourhood characteristics (e.g., average income, distance to nearest hospital)

5 Two examples No linkage with survey data in these examples Use of income tax records – To measure retirement and assess income replacement in retirement Use of health records – To assess the age pattern of treatment for hip replacement

6 Income in retirement Access to LAD (Longitudinal Administrative Databank)

7 Figure 2: Income-Age Profiles, by Age of Retirement, 1982 Male Cohort Income and income replacement

8 Hip Replacement Access to Ontario administrative health data – specifically, hospital inpatient records Treatment options for hip replacement– – Therapeutic (no replacement) – Cemented – Uncemented – Autograft – Combined

9 Treatment choices

10 Accounting for state of health makes little difference

11 But hospital matters … HOSP. D HOSP. C HOSP. EHOSP. A HOSP. B

12 Facilitating Access to Data Depends on security requirements – High security – e.g., StatCan RDCs, ICES hubs – Medium security – e.g., PEDAL – Low security – StatCan public use files Cooperation needed to make access routine – Gov’t departments, including data custodians, service providers, and researchers – Need to address privacy concerns – Documentation /understanding of files

13 Benefits of providing research access to admin data Access to highly qualified and strongly motivated researchers Can facilitate both researcher-driven investigations and commissioned studies Routine access to such data makes it possible to address matters of policy relevance at very low cost – Faculty, graduate students, PDFs

14 Benefits … (cont’d) Formal evaluation of the various projects undertaken as part of the McMaster Pilot observed that – “extended analysis relevant to billions of dollars of spending” – “alerts practitioners and policy makers to potential adverse effects”

15 How to get there Keep talking! Must have buy-in at the top – i.e., DMs, ADMs must be persuaded – Keep focus on the social benefits – Respect privacy concerns – BUT, find ways to respect privacy concerns without foregoing the benefits that can be derived from evidence


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