Volume 50 | Number S1 | August 2015

Abstract List

Jason L. Salemi Ph.D., Abraham A. Salinas‐Miranda M.D., Ph.D., Roneé E. Wilson Ph.D., Hamisu M. Salihu M.D., Ph.D.


Objective

To describe the use of a clinically enhanced maternal and child health () database to strengthen community‐engaged research activities, and to support the sustainability of data infrastructure initiatives.


Data Sources/Study Setting

Population‐based, longitudinal database covering over 2.3 million mother–infant dyads during a 12‐year period (1998–2009) in Florida. Setting: A community‐based participatory research () project in a socioeconomically disadvantaged community in central Tampa, Florida.


Study Design

Case study of the use of an enhanced state database for supporting activities.


Principal Findings

A federal data infrastructure award resulted in the creation of an database in which over 92 percent of all birth certificate records for infants born between 1998 and 2009 were linked to maternal and infant hospital encounter‐level data. The population‐based, longitudinal database was used to supplement data collected from focus groups and community surveys with epidemiological and health care cost data on important disparity issues in the target community. Data were used to facilitate a community‐driven, decision‐making process in which the most important priorities for intervention were identified.


Conclusions

Integrating statewide all‐payer, hospital‐based databases into can empower underserved communities with a reliable source of health data, and it can promote the sustainability of newly developed data systems.