Abstract

IntroductionLinking places to people is a core element of the UK government’s geospatial strategy. Matching patient addresses in electronic health records to their Unique Property Reference Numbers (UPRNs) enables spatial linkage for research, innovation and public benefit. Available algorithms are not transparent or evaluated for use with addresses recorded by health care providers.ObjectivesTo describe and quality assure the open-source deterministic ASSIGN address-matching algorithm applied to general practitioner-recorded patient addresses.MethodsBest practice standards were used to report the ASSIGN algorithm match rate, sensitivity and positive predictive value using gold-standard datasets from London and Wales. We applied the ASSIGN algorithm to the recorded addresses of a sample of 1,757,018 patients registered with all general practices in north east London. We examined bias in match results for the study population using multivariable analyses to estimate the likelihood of an address-matched UPRN by demographic, registration, and organisational variables.ResultsWe found a 99.5% and 99.6% match rate with high sensitivity (0.999,0.998) and positive predictive value (0.996,0.998) for the Welsh and London gold standard datasets respectively, and a 98.6% match rate for the study population.The 1.4% of the study population without a UPRN match were more likely to have changed registered address in the last 12 months (match rate: 95.4%), be from a Chinese ethnic background (95.5%), or registered with a general practice using the SystmOne clinical record system (94.4%). Conversely, people registered for more than 6.5 years with their general practitioner were more likely to have a match (99.4%) than those with shorter registration durations.ConclusionsASSIGN is a highly accurate open-source address-matching algorithm with a high match rate and minimal biases when evaluated against a large sample of general practice-recorded patient addresses. ASSIGN has potential to be used in other address-based datasets including those with information relevant to the wider determinants of health.

Highlights

  • Linking places to people is a core element of the UK government’s geospatial strategy

  • ASSIGN is a highly accurate open-source address-matching algorithm with a high match rate and minimal biases when evaluated against a large sample of general practice-recorded patient addresses

  • ASSIGN has potential to be used in other address-based datasets including those with information relevant to the wider determinants of health

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Summary

Introduction

Linking places to people is a core element of the UK government’s geospatial strategy. Matching patient addresses in electronic health records to their Unique Property Reference Numbers (UPRNs) enables spatial linkage for research, innovation and public benefit. Address-matching is data linkage that enables spatial linkage by matching nonstandardised addresses recorded in an administrative dataset to a reference address gazetteer that provides standardised address formats, property reference numbers, and geographic co-ordinates. In 2019, the Public Sector Geospatial Agreement [6] gave more than 5,000 public sector organisations unlimited access to Ordnance Survey data, including Unique Property Reference Numbers (UPRNs) - the unique identifier for every addressable location in Great Britain. UPRNs are a mandated standard across the public sector, challenges remain to implement this fully within the National Health Service (NHS) enabling geospatial linkage for research, innovation, and public benefit

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