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The Scottish Longitudinal Study (SLS) is a large-scale linkage study created using data from administrative and statistical sources. These include: census data from 1991 onwards; vital events data (births, deaths, marriages); NHS Central Register data (gives information on migration into or out of Scotland); and education data (including Schools Census and SQA data).
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The Scottish Longitudinal Education Outcomes Universities extract dataset contains information on students from Scottish Higher Education Institutions.
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Cohort of over 48,000 birth records (pregnancy, labour, birth and care) in Dundee. Between 1952-1966. Contains information on the birthing events such as birth weight, date, feeding, and socio economic variables such as parent occupation.
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Growing Up in Scotland is a longitudinal research study, tracking the lives of thousands of young people and their families from the early years, through childhood and as they move into adulthood.
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Tayside echocardiographic dataset. The dataset collects all the values obtained during the scan
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The SSCQ gathers survey responses from identical questions in the Scottish Crime and Justice Survey, the Scottish Health Survey and the Scottish Household Survey into one output.
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This data set contains Hypoglycemic Events and is provided for the whole of Scotland.
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The household, random adult, person and random schoolchild datasets from the Scottish Household Survey. There are datasets for each survey year, 1999 to 2019. The SAS views bring these datasets together to facilitate time series analysis. SAS format catalogs for the variables are also available for 2013 to 2019 and there is a master catalog that brings together the catalogs for all years.
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2000 health care workers in NHS Tayside and from social care will have blood samples tested to detect antibodies to SARS-CoV-2, to identify undiagnosed asymptomatic healthcare worker infections with COVID-19.
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The Scottish Health Survey (SHeS) was introduced in 1995 to provide a detailed picture of the health of the Scottish population in private households. It was designed to make a major contribution to the monitoring of health in Scotland.
The survey asks a range of questions relating to health and health behaviours, as well as collecting height and weight measurements.
This dataset is owned and managed by the Scottish Government.