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1970 British Cohort Study: Sixteen-Year Follow-Up, 1986

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https://datacatalogue.ukdataservice.ac.uk/studies/study/3535#doi
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<i>The BCS70 Sixteen-Year Follow-up</I><br> The purpose of this study, the sixteen-year follow-up, was to review and evaluate adolescent (mid-teenage) health, care, education, social and family environment throughout Great Britain, as experienced by the BCS70 cohort.<br> <br> After consultation with the depositor, several files previously available with this study have been temporarily withdrawn. These files cover the leisure and dietary diary files and extra demographics. The Centre for Longitudinal Studies is currently working on documentation for these files, which will become available to users again once the new documentation is ready.<br> <br> At the time of the sixteen-year follow-up, a parallel survey was also conducted with head teachers of schools likely to be attended by cohort members. The main impetus behind this was to find out more about these schools, especially as many of the cohort members were about to leave full-time education. The head teacher questionnaires were not able to be keyed, documented and deposited at the time of the survey due to lack of resources, but funding finally became available in 2004/5 to complete this task at CLS. The resulting dataset is archived under SN 5225.<br> <br> For the 7th edition (March 2017) a small number of primary identifiers (BCSID) have been changed to realign them to previous sweeps of data. See the documentation for full details of the work done.<br> <br> <I>October 2017 - new derived variable BD4TYPE added to derived file:</I><br> During October 2017, a new variable BD4TYPE, detailing 'School Type Age 16 (derived from STYPE, B9SC16TP and 1986 School Census)', was added to the derived variables file bcs4derived. The documentation has been updated accordingly.<br> <br> <i>Background</i><br> The <i>1970 British Cohort Study</i> (BCS70) began in 1970 when data were collected about the births and families of babies born in the United Kingdom in one particular week in 1970. The first wave, called the <i>British Births Survey</i>, was carried out by the National Birthday Trust Fund in association with the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. Its aims were to examine the social and biological characteristics of the mother in relation to neonatal morbidity, and to compare the results with those of the <i>National Child Development Study</i> (NCDS), which commenced in 1958 (held separately at the UK Data Archive under GN 33004). Participants from Northern Ireland, who had been included in the birth survey, were dropped from the study in all subsequent sweeps, which only included respondents from Great Britain.<br> <br> Since BCS70 began, there have been eight further full data collection exercises in order to monitor the cohort members' health, education, social and economic circumstances. These took place when respondents were aged 5, in 1975 (held under SN 2699), aged 10, in 1980 (SN 3723), aged 16, in 1986 (SN 3535), aged 26, in 1996 (SN 3833), aged 30, 1999-2000 (SN 5558), aged 34, in 2004-2005 (SN 5585) and aged 42 in 2012 (SN 7473). The first two sweeps (at 5 and 10 years) were carried out by the Department of Child Health at Bristol University. During these times, the survey was known as the <i>Child Health and Education Study</i> (CHES). The 16-year survey was carried out by the International Centre for Child Studies and named <i>Youthscan</i>. The Social Statistics Research Unit (SSRU) became involved with the BCS70 study at this time, and eventually changed its name to the Centre for Longitudinal Studies (CLS), based at the Institute of Education, University of London. With each successive attempt, the scope of BCS70 has broadened from a strictly medical focus at birth, to encompass physical and educational development at the age of 5, physical, educational and social development at the ages of 10 and 16, and physical, educational, social and economic development at 26 years and beyond. Further information about the BCS70 and may be found on the <a href="http://www.cls.ioe.ac.uk/" title="Centre for Longitudinal Studies">Centre for Longitudinal Studies</a> website. As well as BCS70, the CLS now also conducts the NCDS series. <br> <br> <i>Response dataset:</i><br> A separate dataset covering response to BCS70 over all nine waves is available under SN 5641, <i>1970 British Cohort Study Response Dataset, 1970-2012</i>. Users are advised to order this study alongside the other waves of BCS70.<br> <br> <i>Subsample, supplementary and related studies</i><br> A range of sub-sample and supplementary surveys have also been conducted, such as the Ten-year Follow-up Special Needs Survey (held under SN 7064) and a supplementary survey of head teachers (held under SN 5225) at the time of the 16-year follow-up in 1986. A related study, <i>Coding of Text Data from BCS70 at 10 and 16 Years: Health Care Utilisation of School Aged Children, 1970-1986</i>, is also held under SN 4126. The aim of this project was to code text variables from BCS70 files, selected from the ten- and 16-year follow-ups to provide information about health care utilisation by the target age group.<br> <br> <i>How to access genetic and/or bio-medical sample data from a range of longitudinal surveys:</i><br> A useful overview of the governance routes for applying for genetic and bio-medical sample data, which are not available through the UK Data Service, can be found at <a href="http://www.metadac.ac.uk/data-access-through-metadac/" title="Governance of data and sample access">Governance of data and sample access</a> on the METADAC (Managing Ethico-social, Technical and Administrative issues in Data Access) website.<br> <br>
提供机构:
UK Data Service
创建时间:
2017-03-22
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