Cohort Profile: The 100 Million Brazilian Cohort.

Mauricio LBarreto; Maria YuryIchihara; Julia M Pescarini ORCID logo; M Sanni Ali ORCID logo; Gabriela LBorges; Rosemeire LFiaccone; Rita de CássiaRibeiro-Silva; Carlos ATeles; DanielaAlmeida; SamilaSena; +14 more... Roberto PCarreiro; LilianaCabral; Bethania AAlmeida; George CGBarbosa; RobespierrePita; Marcos EBarreto; Andre AFMendes; Dandara ORamos; Elizabeth B Brickley ORCID logo; NiveaBispo; Daiane BMachado; Enny S Paixao ORCID logo; Laura CRodrigues; Liam Smeeth ORCID logo; (2021) Cohort Profile: The 100 Million Brazilian Cohort. International journal of epidemiology, 51 (2). e27-e38. ISSN 0300-5771 DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyab213
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The creation of The 100 Million Brazilian Cohort was motivated by the availability of high quality but dispersed social and health databases in Brazil and the need to integrate data and evaluate the impact of policies aiming to improve the social determinants of health (e.g. social protection policies) on health outcomes, overall and in subgroups of interest in a dynamic cohort. • The baseline of The 100 Million Brazilian Cohort comprises 131 697 800 low-income individuals in 35 358 415 families from 2011 to 2018. The Cohort population is mostly composed of children and young adults, with a higher proportion of females than the general Brazilian population, who identify themselves as Brown and live in the urban area of the country. • Exposure to social protection and the follow-up of individuals are obtained through: (i) deterministic linkage using the Social Identification Number (NIS) to link the Cohort baseline to social protection programmes and to periodically renewed socioeconomic information in Cadatro U ́ nico datasets; and/or (ii) non-deterministic linkage using the CIDACS-RL non-deterministic linkage tool, to link the Cohort baseline to administrative health care datasets such as mortality (Mortality Information System, SIM), disease notification (Information System for Notifiable Diseases, SINAN), birth information (Live Birth Information System, SINASC) and nutrition status (Food and Nutrition Surveillance System, SISVAN). • So far, studies have used The 100 Million Brazilian Cohort to investigate the socioeconomic and demographic determinants of leprosy, leprosy treatment outcomes and low birthweight and to evaluate the impact of the Bolsa Familia Programme (BFP) on leprosy and child mortality. Other studies are now being conducted that are of utmost relevance to the health inequalities of Brazil and many low- and middle-income countries, and many research opportunities are being opened up with the linkage of a range of health outcomes.



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