Version: 1.0.0 | Published: 8 Oct 2024 | Updated: 228 days ago
Documentation
Description:
The NIHR Bioresource consists of several groups of participants: ~70k from the general population and blood donors (COMPARE, INTERVAL and STRIDES studies); ~19k with one of ~50 rare diseases (RD) including a ~5k pilot for GEL; ~30k with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) which include the members of Gut Reaction, the Health Data Research Hub for IBD; and ~20k with Anxiety or depression (GLAD study). It intends to extend recruitment in all areas, and to other rare and common disease groups, with a target of ~300k by 2022. NHS Trust data were received as part of the HDR UK Sprint Exemplar project, on up to 1600 participants with one of 3 rare diseases (BPD, PAH, PID) at one of the 5 NHS Trusts (Cambridge, Leeds, Liverpool, Newcastle and Papworth).
Coverage
Spatial:
United Kingdom,England
Typical Age Range:
18-85
Follow Up:
1 - 10 Years
Provenance
Origin
Purposes:
Study
Sources:
EPR
Collection Situations:
- Secondary care - Accident and Emergency
- Secondary care - Outpatients
- Secondary care - In-patients
Temporal
Accrual Periodicity:
Irregular
Start Date:
01 October 2014
Time Lag:
2-6 months
Accessibility
Access
Access Rights:
Access Service:
Data may only be accessed in an approved Trustworthy Research Environment
Access Request Cost:
Delivery Lead Time:
Not applicable
Jurisdictions:
GB-GBN
Data Controller:
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH)
Data Processor:
Data processors are NIHR BioResource staff, others with Letters of Access to CUH
and approved members of staff at the data centre (AIMES, https://aimes.uk/)
Usage
Data Use Limitations:
Research use only
Data Use Requirements:
- Institution-specific restrictions
- Project-specific restrictions
- Return to database or resource
- Time limit on use
- User-specific restriction
Resource Creators:
NIHR BioResource. Acknowledgement text: "We thank NIHR BioResource volunteers for their participation, and gratefully acknowledge NIHR BioResource centres, NHS Trusts and staff for their contribution. We thank the National Institute for Health Research, NHS Blood and Transplant, and Health Data Research UK as part of the Digital Innovation Hub Programme. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care."
Format and Standards
Vocabulary Encoding Schemes:
NHS NATIONAL CODES
Languages:
en
Formats:
text/csv