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Found 17 result(s)
Content type(s)
Country
Health education and health promotion are important elements of the health system in Germany. The Federal Centre for Health Education (BZgA) has been pursuing the goal of preventing health risks and encouraging health-promoting lifestyles since its establishment in 1967. In addition, the understanding of health and prevention is changing. Against this backdrop, health education is - as a constant communication process - dedicated to the goal of enabling self-responsible action in relation to health. The data sets can be requested from GESIS via the data archive for social sciences (DAS): https://www.gesis.org/institut/abteilungen/datenarchiv-fuer-sozialwissenschaften
Country
KiGGS is a long-term study conducted by the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) on the health of children and adolescents in Germany. The study repeatedly supplies data, representative of the country as a whole, on the health of under 18-year-olds. In addition, the children and adolescents of the first KiGGS study are repeatedly invited, and they continue to be monitored right into their adulthood.
Country
The Research Data Centre of the Robert Koch Institute (FDZ RKI) publishes the data of population-representative health surveys in the form of public use files (PUFs).The main purpose of health surveys is to generate a maximum amount of information on the state of health and health-related behaviour of Germany's resident population while ensuring an optimum use of funds. The methodology - i.e. the sample design, the principles on operationalization and measurement, and data-collection techniques - is largely modelled on the tried-and-tested methods of empirical social research. Health interview surveys (HIS) use established survey techniques such as filling out questionnaires, computer-assisted telephone interviews (CATI), computer-assisted personal interviews (CAPI), and online polling via the internet or email. The main difference compared to purely sociological surveys lies in the additional biomedical examinations, tests and medical-biochemical measurements, which generate significant added value in addition to the results of the surveys; this part is referred to internationally as the health examination survey (HES).
Country
Since 2004, the Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology – BIPS has been working on the establishment and maintenance of the project-based German Pharmacoepidemiological Research Database (short GePaRD). GePaRD is based on claims data from statutory health insurance (SHI) providers and currently includes information on about 20 million persons who have been insured with one of the participating providers since 2004. Per data year, there is information on approximately 17% of the general population from all geographical regions of Germany.
Country
The Research Data Center of the Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (FDZ-BAuA) provides selected data from BAuA research. The Public Use Files can be used by scientists as well as by the interested public.
Country
The SHIP study´s main aims include the investigation of health in all its aspects and complexity involving the collection and assessment of data relevant to the prevalence and incidence of common, population-relevant diseases and their risk factors.
Country
The German Central Health Study Hub is a platform that serves two different kinds of users. First, it allows scientists and data holding organizations (data producers) to publish their project characteristics, documents and data related to their research endeavour in a FAIR manner. Obviously, patient-level data cannot be shared publicly, however, metadata describing the patient-level data along with information about data access can be shared via the platform (preservation description information). The other kind of user is a scientist or researcher (data consumer) that likes to find information about past and ongoing studies and is interested in reusing existing patient-level data for their project. To summarize, the platforms connect data providers with data consumers in the domain of clinical, public health and epidemiologic health research to foster reuse. The platform aggregates and harmonizes information already entered in various public repositories such as DRKS, clinicaltrials.gov, WHO ICTRP to provide a holistic view of the German research landscape in the aforementioned research areas. In addition, data stewards actively collect available information from (public) resources such as websites that cannot be automatically integrated. The service started during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Country
The Health Atlas is an alliance of medical ontologists, medical systems biologists and clinical trials groups to design and implement a multi-functional and quality-assured atlas. It provides models, data and metadata on specific use cases from medical research projects from the partner institutions.
Country
The FDZ-DZA (Forschungsdatenzentrum DZA) is a facility of the German Centre of Gerontology (Deutsches Zentrum für Altersfragen, DZA) and has received accreditation as research data center DZA by the German Data Forum (RatSWD). Its main task is to make data of the German Ageing Survey DEAS and the German Survey on Volunteering (FWS) accessible to researchers by providing user-friendly Scientific Use Files (SUF), documentation of the contents and instruments as well support for scholars using the data.
Country
With its “Blood Donor BIOBANK”, the Bavarian Red Cross (BRK) Blood Donor Service offers a unique and innovative resource for biomarker research: the world’s first blood donor based biobank. Biobanks as collections of biological material together with associated medical data open new possibilities for the development of new targeted diagnostics and therapies. The BRK Blood Donor Service maintains a unique collection of over 3 million blood samples, making it one of the largest sample collections worldwide. Every working day 2,000 new samples are added to the collection.
Country
The German National Cohort (NAKO) has been inviting men and women aged between 20 and 69 to 18 study centers throughout Germany since 2014. The participants are medically examined and questioned about their living conditions. The GNC’s aim is to investigate the causes of chronic diseases, such as cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, rheumatism, infectious diseases, and dementia in order to improve prevention, early diagnoses and treatment of these very widely spread diseases.
The Human Mortality Database (HMD) was created to provide detailed mortality and population data to researchers, students, journalists, policy analysts, and others interested in the history of human longevity. The Human Mortality Database (HMD) contains original calculations of death rates and life tables for national populations (countries or areas), as well as the input data used in constructing those tables. The input data consist of death counts from vital statistics, plus census counts, birth counts, and population estimates from various sources.
Country
The population-based cancer registries in each German federal state transfer data to the German Centre for Cancer Registry Data, as required by the Federal Cancer Registry Data Act. These data are combined, quality-checked, analysed and evaluated, and the results published in collaboration with the public health institutions of the federal states.
Country
LIVIVO is an interdisciplinary search engine for literature and information in the field of life sciences. It is run by ZB MED – Information Centre for Life Sciences. LIVIVO automatically searches for the terms you enter in a central index of all the databases. The ZB MED Searchportal already provides a large amount of research data from DataCite data centres (e.g. Beijing Genomics Institute, Natural Environment Research Council) in the field of life sciences. These can be searched directly using the "Documenttype=research data" filter. A further integration of data from life science data repositories is planned.
Country
As a center for scientific research and evidence-based policy advice, RWI requires an effective econometric infrastructure. The increased use of individual and firm data also requires effective regulations and tools for data protection. The research division’s objectives are to advise RWI researchers in methodical questions, to develop new econometric approaches to solve concrete research questions, and to ensure data protection.
Country
OpenAgrar is an open access repository which publishes, stores, archives and distributes publications, publication references and research data. Its resources can be searched and used by everyone. It contains amongst others theses, reports, conference proceedings, journal articles, books, institutional documents, research datasets, videos and interviews.