Healthcare Systems Data
Cross-source consensus on Healthcare Systems Data from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Benefits
Evidence quality
Where it comes from
Highlighted claims
- Healthcare systems data include mortality records, cancer registrations, treatment datasets, radiotherapy datasets, and hospital admissions data. — Blood Cancer Clinical Trials Long-term Follow-up Using Integrated Healthcare Systems Data (BLISS): protocol for a data-linkage study integrating randomised clinical trials with national healthcare systems data
- Healthcare systems data must be rigorously tested for completeness, accuracy, and agreement with trial outcomes before being relied on for scientific or regulatory purposes. — Blood Cancer Clinical Trials Long-term Follow-up Using Integrated Healthcare Systems Data (BLISS): protocol for a data-linkage study integrating randomised clinical trials with national healthcare systems data
- BLISS will integrate multiple national datasets supplied through NHS England, each contributing a different part of the long-term clinical picture. — Blood Cancer Clinical Trials Long-term Follow-up Using Integrated Healthcare Systems Data (BLISS): protocol for a data-linkage study integrating randomised clinical trials with national healthcare systems data
- Civil registration of death data are considered complete and reliable, while systemic anticancer therapy data have known gaps in haematological cancers. — Blood Cancer Clinical Trials Long-term Follow-up Using Integrated Healthcare Systems Data (BLISS): protocol for a data-linkage study integrating randomised clinical trials with national healthcare systems data
- Healthcare systems data could reduce the cost, time, and resource burden of clinical trial follow-up. — Blood Cancer Clinical Trials Long-term Follow-up Using Integrated Healthcare Systems Data (BLISS): protocol for a data-linkage study integrating randomised clinical trials with national healthcare systems data