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BOSTON COLLEGE Statistical Data Catalog - Local Server Access

Statistical Datasets in category R0: Health and Health Care Facilities


·  National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services (N-SSATS), 2002:

The National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services (N-SSATS) is designed to collect information from all facilities in the United States, both public and private, that provide substance abuse treatment. N-SSATS provides the mechanism for quantifying the dynamic character and composition of the United States substance abuse treatment delivery system. The objectives of N-SSATS are to collect multipurpose data that can be used to assist the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and state and local governments in assessing the nature and extent of services provided and in forecasting treatment resource requirements, update SAMHSA's Inventory of Substance Abuse Treatment Services (I-SATS), analyze general treatment services trends, and generate the National Directory of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Treatment Programs and its online Abuse Treatment Facility Locator equivalent, the Substance Abuse Treatment Facility Locator: http://findtreatment.samhsa.gov. Data are collected on topics including ownership, services offered, primary focus (substance abuse, mental health, both, general health, other), hotline operation, methadone/LAAM dispensing, languages in which treatment is provided, type of treatment provided, number of clients (total and under age 18), number of beds, types of payment accepted, sliding fee scale, special programs offered, facility accreditation and licensure/certification, and managed care agreements. N-SSATS was formerly titled the Uniform Facility Data Set (UFDS).

Codebook

Questionnare

The data is available in the following formats:

·         Stata (in gzipped form):
Stata 869 KB
·         SAS transport (in gzipped form):
SAS    2 MB
·         SPSS portable (in gzipped form):
SPSS    616 KB
·  Community Tracking Study Physician Survey, 2000-2001:

This study comprises the third round of the physician survey component of the Community Tracking Study (CTS). The CTS is a large-scale investigation of changes in the health care system and their effects on people. Central to the design of the CTS is its community focus. Sixty sites (51 metropolitan areas and 9 nonmetropolitan areas) were randomly selected to form the core of the CTS and to be representative of the nation as a whole. As in the first two rounds of the physician survey (COMMUNITY TRACKING STUDY PHYSICIAN SURVEY, 1996-1997: [UNITED STATES] (ICPSR 2597) and COMMUNITY TRACKING STUDY PHYSICIAN SURVEY, 1998-1999: [UNITED STATES] (ICPSR 3267)), the third round was administered to physicians in the 60 CTS sites and to a supplemental national sample of physicians. The survey instrument collected information on physician supply and specialty distribution, practice arrangements and physician ownership of practices, physician time allocation, sources of practice revenue, level and determinants of physician compensation, provision of charity care, career satisfaction, physicians' perceptions of their ability to deliver care, effects of care management strategies, and various other aspects of physicians' practice of medicine. Part 3, the Site and County Crosswalk Data File, identifies the counties that constitute each CTS site. Part 4, Physician Survey Summary File, contains site-level estimates and standard errors for selected physician characteristics, e.g., the average age of physicians, the percentage of physicians who were either very or somewhat dissatisfied with their overall career in medicine, and the average percentage of patients with prescription coverage that included the use of a formulary.

Codebooks: Main File | County Crosswalk File | Physician Survey Summary File

Documentation: Main File

The data is available in the following formats:

·         Stata (in gzipped form):
Main File    1.04 MB
County Crosswalk File    5.92 KB
Physician Survey Summary File    49.3 KB
·         SAS transport (in gzipped form):
Main File    2 MB
County Crosswalk File    7 KB
Physician Survey Summary File    82 KB
·         SPSS portable (in gzipped form):
Main File    737 KB
County Crosswalk File    9 KB
Physician Survey Summary File    88 KB
·  Community Tracking Study Physician Survey, 1998-1999:

This study comprises the second round of the physician survey component of the Community Tracking Study (CTS). The CTS is a national study designed to track changes in the health care system and the effects of the changes on care delivery and on individuals. Central to the design of the CTS is its community focus. Sixty sites (51 metropolitan areas and 9 nonmetropolitan areas) were randomly selected to form the core of the CTS and to be representative of the nation as a whole. As in the first round of the physician survey (COMMUNITY TRACKING STUDY PHYSICIAN SURVEY, 1996-1997: [UNITED STATES] (ICPSR 2597)), the second round was administered to physicians in the 60 CTS sites and to a supplemental national sample of physicians. The survey instrument collected information on physician supply and specialty distribution, practice arrangements and physician ownership of practices, physician time allocation, sources of practice revenue, level and determinants of physician compensation, provision of charity care, career satisfaction, physicians' perceptions of their ability to deliver care, views on effects of care management strategies, and various other aspects of physicians' practice of medicine. For primary care physicians (PCPs), the instrument also provided vignettes of clinical presentations for which there was no prescribed method of treatment. PCPs were asked to state the percentage of patients for whom they would recommend the course of action specified in each particular vignette. Part 3, the Site and County Crosswalk Data File, identifies the counties that constitute each site. Part 4, Physician Survey Summary File, contains site-level estimates and standard errors for selected physician characteristics, e.g., the percentage of physicians who were foreign medical school graduates, the mean age of physicians, and the mean percentage of patient care practice revenue from Medicaid.

Codebooks: Main File | County Crosswalk File | Physician Survey Summary File

Documentation: Main File

The data is available in the following formats:

·         Stata (in gzipped form):
Main File    916 KB
County Crosswalk File    5.91 KB
Physician Survey Summary File    40 KB
·         SAS transport (in gzipped form):
Main File    2 MB
County Crosswalk File    7 KB
Physician Survey Summary File    66 KB
·         SPSS portable (in gzipped form):
Main File    658 KB
County Crosswalk File    9 KB
Physician Survey Summary File    72 KB
·  The Neonatal Costs of Maternal Cocaine Use: Harlem Hospital, 1985-1986

Investigators compared 355 cocaine-exposed infants born in a large, publicly funded inner-city hospital with a random sample of 199 non-exposed infants born in the same hospital to examine the added neonatal cost and length of hospital stay associated with fetal cocaine exposure. Between September 1, 1985 and August 31, 1986, all newborn infants were screened by urine test for illicit substances, and medical records were reviewed for maternal histories of substance abuse. The cocaine-exposed group consisted of all single live births who were identified by either maternal history or infant urine assay. The control group was comprised of single live births for whom no drug use history was indicated by either maternal history or infant urine test. Investigators assessed a total of 129 variables across 554 cases. Outcome measures included the cost and length of stay for each infant until medically cleared for hospital discharge, as well as the cost and length of stay for each infant until actual discharge from the hospital.

These data were acquired from the The Maternal Drug Abuse Data Archive (MDA) of Sociometrics Corporation. The collection was established with funding from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).

List of variables

Documentation

Stata format (in gzipped form):

mda04.dta.gz   33 Kb

SPSS portable format (in gzipped form):

mda04.por.gz   40 Kb

·  National Maternal and Infant Follow-up Health Survey, 1991

The 1991 Longitudinal Follow-up to the 1988 National Maternal and Infant Health Survey (NMIHS) was conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics. The 1991 Follow-up study examines such factors as child health status and development, the effects of low birth weight, use of federal programs, child safety, child injury, child care, pediatric care, maternal health, sociodemographic characteristics, acute and chronic illness, and health insurance. The 1988 study examined factors relating to poor pregnancy outcome, such as adequacy of prenatal care, inadequate or excessive weight gain during pregnancy, maternal health behaviors such as smoking, drinking and drug use, and pregnancy and delivery complications. The 1988 National Maternal and Infant Health Survey (NMIHS) is archived as RADIUS data set #18-20.

These data were acquired from the The Research Archive on Disability in the U.S. 1999 Edition (RADIUS), of Sociometrics Corporation. The collection was established with funding from the National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research (NCMRR) within the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)

List of variables for RAD01

List of variables for RAD02

Documentation

The data is available in the following formats:

·         Stata:

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad01.dta.gz (in gzipped form)  1.65 Mb

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad02.dta.gz (in gzipped form)  4.61 Mb

·         SAS transport:

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad01.tpt.gz (in gzipped form)    3.2 Mb

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad02.tpt.gz (in gzipped form)    6.7 Mb

·         SPSS portable:

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad01.por.gz (in gzipped form)    2.2 Mb

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad02.por.gz (in gzipped form)    5.2 Mb

  

·  National Maternal and Infant Health Survey, 1988

The 1988 National Maternal and Infant Health Survey (NMIHS) was conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). This study examines child health status and development, use of federal programs, child safety, child injury, child care, pediatric care, maternal health, socio-demographic characteristics, acute and chronic illness, and health insurance. Furthermore, the 1988 NMIHS examines factors related to poor pregnancy outcomes, such as adequacy of prenatal care, inadequate or excessive weight gain during pregnancy, maternal health behaviors such as smoking, drinking and drug use, and pregnancy and delivery complications. This study is a national sample of live births, fetal deaths, and infant deaths in 1988. Furthermore, this study includes a supplementary sample of Hispanic live births, fetal deaths, and infant deaths in Texas, and a supplementary sample of live births for urban American Indians. These data can be linked to RADIUS data sets #01-02 which are the 1991 Follow-up Live Birth Survey and 1991 Follow-up Medical Provider Surveys for this study. These studies assess longitudinal outcomes for mothers and children between 1988 and 1991. The NMIHS contains data on 28,334 mothers and their infants across 2,205 variables.

These data were acquired from the The Research Archive on Disability in the U.S. 1999 Edition (RADIUS), of Sociometrics Corporation. The collection was established with funding from the National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research (NCMRR) within the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)

List of variables - Part 1 | Part 2

Documentation

The data is available in the following formats:

·         Stata/SE:

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad1820.dta.gz (in gzipped form)  8.46 Mb

Stata/SE is available on the Unix systems econ.bc.edu, ecsa200.bc.edu, and goanna.bc.edu, and may be acquired for desktop systems. You may use Stata/SE or Stat/Transfer on one of the Unix systems to create a subset file that may be used with standard (Intercooled) Stata, and will require much less RAM.

·         SAS transport:

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad1820.tpt.gz (in gzipped form)    20.8 Mb

·         SPSS portable:

http://capricorn.bc.edu/data1/vdc/private/rad/rad1820.por.gz (in gzipped form)    16.5 Mb

  


Last modified: 20 August 2004