Abstract

Denmark has a large network of population-based medical databases, which routinely collect high-quality data as a by-product of health care provision. The Danish medical databases include administrative, health, and clinical quality databases. Understanding the full research potential of these data sources requires insight into the underlying health care system. This review describes key elements of the Danish health care system from planning and delivery to record generation. First, it presents the history of the health care system, its overall organization and financing. Second, it details delivery of primary, hospital, psychiatric, and elderly care. Third, the path from a health care contact to a database record is followed. Finally, an overview of the available data sources is presented. This review discusses the data quality of each type of medical database and describes the relative technical ease and cost-effectiveness of exact individual-level linkage among them. It is shown, from an epidemiological point of view, how Denmark's population represents an open dynamic cohort with complete long-term follow-up, censored only at emigration or death. It is concluded that Denmark's constellation of universal health care, long-standing routine registration of most health and life events, and the possibility of exact individual-level data linkage provides unlimited possibilities for epidemiological research.

Keywords

DanishMedicineEpidemiologyDatabaseHealth careEnvironmental healthFamily medicineInternal medicineComputer science

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Publication Info

Year
2019
Type
review
Volume
Volume 11
Pages
563-591
Citations
1209
Access
Closed

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Morten Schmidt, Sigrún Alba Jóhannesdóttir Schmidt, Kasper Adelborg et al. (2019). <p>The Danish health care system and epidemiological research: from health care contacts to database records</p>. Clinical Epidemiology , Volume 11 , 563-591. https://doi.org/10.2147/clep.s179083

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DOI
10.2147/clep.s179083