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  1. 1. Klinische Studie
  2. 2. Routinedokumentation
  3. 3. Register-/Kohortenstudien
  4. 4. Qualitätssicherung
  5. 5. Datenstandard
  6. 6. Patientenfragebogen
  7. 7. Medizinische Fachrichtung
    1. 7.1. Anästhesie
    1. 7.2. Dermatologie
    1. 7.3. HNO
    1. 7.4. Geriatrie
    1. 7.5. Gynäkologie/Geburtshilfe
    1. 7.6. Innere Medizin
      1. Hämatologie
      1. Infektiologie
      1. Kardiologie/Angiologie
      1. Pneumologie
      1. Gastroenterologie
      1. Nephrologie
      1. Endokrinologie/Stoffwechsel
      1. Rheumatologie
    1. 7.7. Neurologie
    1. 7.8. Augenheilkunde
    1. 7.9. Palliativmedizin
    1. 7.10. Pathologie/Rechtsmedizin
    1. 7.11. Kinderheilkunde
    1. 7.12. Psychiatrie/Psychosomatik
    1. 7.13. Radiologie
    1. 7.14. Chirurgie
      1. Allgemein-/Viszeralchirurgie
      1. Neurochirurgie
      1. Plastische Chirurgie
      1. Herz-/Thoraxchirurgie
      1. Unfallchirurgie/Orthopädie
      1. Gefäßchirurgie
    1. 7.15. Urologie
    1. 7.16. Zahnmedizin/MKG
Modelos de datos seleccionados

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- 29.01.25 - 6 formularios, 1 itemgroup, 4 items, 1 idioma
Itemgroup: pht005036
Principal Investigator: David Weir, PhD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA MeSH: Aging,Neoplasms,Arthritis,Lung Diseases, Obstructive,Dementia,Heart Diseases,Heart Failure,Hypertension,Myocardial Infarction,Diabetes Mellitus,Hypercholesterolemia,Obesity,Body Weight,Mobility Limitation,Pain,Cholesterol,Hemoglobin A, Glycosylated,C-Reactive Protein,Cystatin C,Depression,Alcohol Drinking,Smoking,Personality,Life Style,Cognition,Demography,Ethnic Groups,Health Status,Population Groups,Housing,Independent Living,Socioeconomic Factors,Career Mobility,Educational Status,Employment,Family Characteristics,Income,Occupations,Poverty,Social Change,Social Class,Social Conditions,Risk Factors https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gap/cgi-bin/study.cgi?study_id=phs000428 *Introduction to V2: *This data release comprises data from the V1 release combined with approximately 3,000 additional samples, collected during the HRS 2010 field period. The 2010 data include samples from a random half of the new cohort enrolled in 2010 along with a significant expansion of the minority sample. *Description:* The University of Michigan Health and Retirement Study (HRS) is a longitudinal panel study that surveys a representative sample of approximately 20,000 people in America over the age of 50 every two years. Supported by the National Institute on Aging (NIA U01AG009740) and the Social Security Administration, the HRS explores the changes in labor force participation and the health transitions that individuals undergo toward the end of their work lives and in the years that follow. The study collects information about income, work, assets, pension plans, health insurance, disability, physical health and functioning, cognitive functioning, and health care expenditures. Through its unique and in-depth interviews, the HRS provides an invaluable and growing body of multidisciplinary data that researchers can use to address important questions about the challenges and opportunities of aging. Because of its innovation and importance, the HRS has become the model and hub for a growing network of harmonized longitudinal aging studies around the world. *Origins of the HRS.* As the population ages it is increasingly important to obtain reliable data about aging and topics that are relevant to a range of policy issues in aging. To address this need, the National Institutes on Aging (NIA) established a cooperative agreement with the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research to collect such data. The HRS launched data collection in 1992 and has re-interviewed the original sample of respondents every two years since then. By adding new cohorts and refreshing the sample, the HRS has grown to become the largest, most representative longitudinal panel study of Americans 50 years and older. *HRS Study Design.* The target population for the original HRS cohort includes all adults in the contiguous United States born during the years 1931-1941 who reside in households, with a 2:1 oversample of African-American and Hispanic populations. The original sample is refreshed with new birth cohorts (51-56 years of age) every six years. The sample has been expanded over the years to include a broader range of birth cohorts as well. The target population for the AHEAD survey consists of United States household residents who were born in 1923 or earlier. Children of the Depression (CODA) recruits households born 1924-1930, War Babies 1942-47, Early Boomers 1948-53, and Mid-Boomers 1954-59. Data collection includes a mixed mode design combining in-person, telephone, mail, and Internet. For consenting respondents, HRS data are linked at the individual level to administrative records from Social Security and Medicare claims. *Genetic Research in the HRS.* The HRS has genotyped 2.5 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on respondents using Illumina's Human Omni2.5-Quad (Omni2.5) BeadChip. The genotyping was performed by the NIH Center for Inherited Disease Research (CIDR). Saliva was collected on half of the HRS sample each wave starting in 2006. In 2006, saliva was collected using a mouthwash collection method. From 2008 onward, the data collection method switched to the Oragene kit. Saliva completion rates were 83% in 2006, 84% in 2008, and 80% in 2010 among new cohort enrollees. HRS Phenotypic data. Phenotypic data are available on a variety of dimensions. Health measures include physical/psychological self-report, various health conditions, disabilities, cognitive performance, health behaviors (smoking, drinking, exercise), physical performance and anthropomorphic measures, and biomarkers (HbA1c, Total Cholesterol, HDL, CRP, Cystatin-C). Data are also available on health services including utilization, insurance and out-of-pocket spending with linkage to Medicare records. Economic measures include employment status/history, earnings, disability, retirement, type of work, income by source, wealth by asset type, capital gains/debt, consumption, linkage to pensions, Social Security earnings/benefit histories. There is also extensive information on family structure, proximity, transfers to/from of money, time, social and psychological characteristics, as well as a wide range of demographics. Performance on a cognitive test combining immediate and delayed word recall was selected as an example trait for the dbGaP data release. In the immediate word recall task the interviewer reads a list of 10 nouns to the respondent and asks the respondent to recall as many words as possible from the list in any order. After approximately five minutes of asking other survey questions, the respondent is asked to recall the nouns previously presented as part of the immediate recall task. The total recall score is the sum of the correct answers to these two tasks, with a range of 0 to 20. Researchers who wish to link to other HRS measures not in dbGaP will be able to apply for access from HRS. A separate Data Use Agreement (DUA) will be required for linkage to the HRS data. See the HRS website (http://hrsonline.isr.umich.edu/gwas) for details.

Eligibility

1 itemgroup 6 items

pht002612.v2.p2

1 itemgroup 4 items

pht002613.v2.p2

1 itemgroup 5 items

pht002614.v2.p2

1 itemgroup 7 items

pht005037.v1.p2

1 itemgroup 5 items
- 12.10.22 - 6 formularios, 1 itemgroup, 3 items, 1 idioma
Itemgroup: IG.elig
Principal Investigator: Michael A. Province, PhD, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA MeSH: Longevity,Aging,Cardiovascular Diseases,Neoplasms,Stroke,Inflammation,Immune System,Diabetes Mellitus,Hypertension,Dyslipidemias,Lipids,Osteoporosis,Pulmonary Function Tests,Kidney Function Tests,Alzheimer Disease,Depression,Personality,Executive Function,Reproductive History https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gap/cgi-bin/study.cgi?study_id=phs000397 The Long Life Family Study (LLFS) is an international collaborative study of the genetics and familial components of exceptional survival, longevity, and healthy aging. Families were recruited through elderly probands (generally in their 90s) who self-reported on the survival history of their parents and siblings, and on the basis of this information, families which showed clustering of exceptional survival were recruited. [Specifically, a Family Longevity Selection Score (FLOSS) ≥7 was required. The FLOSS measures the average excess Observed lifespan over that Expected based upon lifetables, while adding a bonus term for still-living individuals. Thus FLOSS is a useful tool for scoring and selecting families for inclusion in a research study of exceptional survival (Sebastiani et al., 2009, PMID: 19910380)]. Probands resided in the catchment areas of four Field Centers (Boston University, Columbia University, University of Pittsburgh, and University of Southern Denmark). Recruited family members were phenotyped through extensive in-home visits by teams of technicians who traveled all over the USA and Denmark. Blood assays were centrally processed at a Laboratory Core (University of Minnesota) and protocols were standardized, monitored and coordinated through a Data Management Coordinating Center (Washington University). We examined and extensively phenotyped in all major domains of healthy aging, 4,953 individuals in 539 families through comprehensive in-home visits. Of these, 4,815 gave dbGaP sharing permission and had sufficient quantity/quality of DNA for GWAS genotyping. This large collection of families, selected on the basis of clustering for exceptional survival, is a unique resource for the study of human longevity and healthy aging. We estimate that less than 1% of the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) families (a roughly random population family sample) would meet the minimal entrance criteria for exceptional survival required in the LLFS (Sebastiani et al., 2009, PMID: 19910380). Thus, the least exceptional LLFS families show more clustering for exceptional longevity than 99% of the FHS families. Although the LLFS pedigrees were selected on the basis of longevity per se in the upper generation (and the generation above that), the children's generation have significantly lower rates of many major diseases and have better healthy aging profiles for many disease phenotypes (Newman et al., 2011, PMID: 21258136). The participants had their first in-person visit between 2006 and 2009. After that visit, they were contacted annually by telephone to update vital status, medical history, and general health. Between 2014 and 2017, willing participants completed a second in-person visit. The second visit followed the same protocols and centralized training as the first visit. During the second visit, a portable carotid ultrasound exam was added. Again, participants were continuously contacted annually for telephone follow-up during the period of the second in-person visit and after that. Annual telephone follow-ups currently ongoing, and plans for a third in-person visit are in progress.

pht002407.v3.p3

1 itemgroup 4 items

pht002408.v3.p3

1 itemgroup 6 items

pht002410.v3.p3

1 itemgroup 106 items

pht003356.v3.p3

1 itemgroup 4 items

pht002409.v3.p3

1 itemgroup 3 items

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