Abstract
Growing Up in Australia is a national longitudinal study of the development and wellbeing of 10,000 Australian children. The study has been committed since inception to support data linkage to other datasets, to value‐add to the primary modes of data collection from parents and others. It can increase the efficiency of data collection by reducing respondent and interviewer burden as well as adding new dimensions to addressing key research questions. The viability of data linkage needs to take into account the relevance of the data for research and policy, as well as data quality and cost, privacy and consent issues and the ease of access. This article documents the various sources for data linkage considered for Growing Up in Australia, including government health and education records, child care accreditation data, and community‐level data, and examines the strengths and challenges associated with each.
†Views expressed in this article are those of the authors and may not reflect the policy or opinions of their affiliated organisations.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to acknowledge the work undertaken by Christine Millward and Grace Soriano, who, in conjunction with Ann Sanson, conducted the early research into the sources and viability of data linkage for Growing Up in Australia.
Notes
†Views expressed in this article are those of the authors and may not reflect the policy or opinions of their affiliated organisations.