HDR Gateway logo
HDR Gateway logo

Bookmarks

Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank (AMND)

Population Size

193,886

People

Years

1948 - 2017

Associated BioSamples

None/not available

Geographic coverage

United Kingdom

Scotland

...see more

Lead time

Not applicable

Summary

The Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank holds data for all Aberdeen City births from 1949 to the present day. From 1951 to present this unique database links all the obstetric and fertility-related events occurring to women from a defined population.

Documentation

The Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank (AMND) was initiated in the department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Aberdeen, in 1950, by the late Professor Sir Dugald Baird, in collaboration with the Medical Research Council’s (MRC’s) Medical Sociology Unit. It was originally set up as a resource for the study of the physiology, pathology and sociology of pregnancy, but the usefulness of the AMND has extended significantly beyond this through linkage with other health and social care records as well as intergenerational and family linkages.

The AMND is an invaluable resource for life-course epidemiology, especially since it is one of the earliest and most comprehensive obstetric databases. From the year 1950 to the present, this unique database has been recording all the obstetric and fertility-related events occurring in women residing in Aberdeen, Scotland, UK.

Data are collected from every pregnancy event occurring in Aberdeen Maternity Hospital which is part of the National Health Services (NHS) Grampian.

Aberdeen Maternity Hospital is the only maternity hospital in the city of Aberdeen and serves the Grampian region as well as the Northern Isles, Shetland and Orkney, for tertiary maternity care. A dedicated midwives’ unit also based at the hospital provides shared maternity care for uncomplicated pregnancies. The hospital provides antenatal and postnatal care, with about 4000–5000 babies born every year. In addition, an early pregnancy unit based at the hospital manages complications such as miscarriage and other pregnancy loss. The AMND also captures data from these units.

The AMND population coverage varies according to different areas. It covers about 99% of Aberdeen and about 97% of the entire Grampian region. This differential coverage is due to a small proportion of home births and deliveries in peripheral hospitals.

This description references the International Journal of Epidemiology, Volume 45, Issue 2, April 2016, Pages 389–394,

https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyv356
Dataset type
Health and disease
Dataset sub-type
Not applicable
Dataset population size
193,886

Keywords

Childbirth, Fertility, Obstetrics, Pregnancy, Baby, Babies, Pregnant woman, Mother-baby, Scotland Births, Aberdeenshire, Labour, Spontaneous, Induced, Delivery Type, Delivery Outcome, Ultrasound, Antenatal, Postnatal, Neonatal

Observations

Observed Node
Disambiguating Description
Measured Value
Measured Property
Observation Date

Persons

Total number of women by count of unique patient ID

193886

Count

14 Feb 2022

Events

Total number of pregnancies by count of pregnancy records

293898

Count

14 Feb 2022

Events

Total number of deliveries by count of delivery records

291927

Count

14 Feb 2022

Persons

Total number of babies by count of baby records

297098

Count

14 Feb 2022

Persons

Total number of twins by count of baby records with two births

7643

Count

14 Feb 2022

Provenance

Purpose of dataset collection
Study
Source of data extraction
Paper-based
Collection source setting
Secondary care - In-patients
Patient pathway description

The dataset contains information relating to pregnancies and deliveries. The main data items include the following information:

  1. Patient.
  2. Pregnancy (from first ante-natal booking).
  3. Summary of labour and delivery.
  4. Baby details
,

delivery and outcome.

Other data items include:

  1. Diagnostic procedures
  2. Operative management
  3. Drugs
  4. Indications for procedures
  5. Intergenerational data
  6. Datasets from previous studies
  7. Neonatal data

Information is recorded for both Primary and Secondary care (from initial scans through to delivery).

The full patient pathway is recorded from family details (patient

, husband, mother, father) through to techniques used during delivery, and patient/baby health following delivery.
Image contrast
Not stated
Biological sample availability
None/not available

Structural Metadata

Details

Publishing frequency
Static
Version
2.0.0
Modified

06/09/2024

Citation Requirements
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Medical Research Council (MRC)

Coverage

Start date

24/09/1948

End date

01/10/2017

Time lag
Not applicable
Geographic coverage
United Kingdom, Scotland, Aberdeen City, Aberdeenshire
Minimum age range
12
Maximum age range
57

Accessibility

Language
en
Controlled vocabulary
ICD10
Format
Text

Data Access Request

Dataset pipeline status
Not available
Time to dataset access
Not applicable
Access method category
TRE/SDE
Access service description

The Grampian Data Safe Haven

The Grampian Data Safe Haven (DaSH) is a secure, virtual healthcare data analysis and storage centre established by the University of Aberdeen and NHS Grampian to allow for the secure processing and linking of health data for the Grampian and Scottish population when it is not practicable to obtain consent from individual patients.

The DaSH Research Coordinators can provide advice and support with obtaining the required approvals for DaSH projects. A Permissions Pathway guide explaining the approvals process for DaSH projects is also available. In addition, DaSH have some template application forms with pre-populated information about DaSH that can be used by researchers during the permission application process as appropriate.

DaSH technology ensures unconsented healthcare, social data and other types of sensitive data are accessible for research and clinical purposes whilst protecting individuals’ privacy. Our ethos is built on working with clinicians, researchers and industry partners to improve health and social care by providing a safe and secure environment and enabling cutting-edge research.

The Grampian Data Safe Haven offers bespoke data storage, processing and linkage services based on the individual needs of your research project. The DaSH team works with researchers to provide detailed project planning and data management support whilst ensuring adherence to the highest standards of security and governance and protecting patient confidentiality.

Each project is supported by a Research Coordinator and Data Analyst to ensure projects adhere to permissions and outputs meet the project specification and comply with information security regulations. If you require non-DaSH held datasets, we can assist with obtaining the relevant approvals, as well as coordinating the request with the data custodians and linkage between datasets.

Jurisdiction
GB-SCT
Data use limitation
Research use only
Data use requirements
Ethics approval required
Data Controller

The AMND Steering Committee is responsible for the future preservation of the access to the Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank with data from 1949 onwards.

The MRC Medical Sociology Unit collaborated in and has a responsibility for the Databank up to and including data for 1983 only.

The organisations involved in the preparation

,

processing and access of the data are represented on the Committee as follows:

Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology

,

University of Aberdeen. Grampian University Hospitals Trust

,

Obstetric and Gynaecology Staff Committee. Department of Child Health. MRC Medical Sociology Unit

,

Glasgow. A.U. Computing Centre.

Data Processor
Grampian Data Safe Haven (DaSH)

Dataset Types: Health and disease


Collection Sources: No collection sources listed