Children and Young People’s Health Services Data Set Overview

Contextual Overview

The Maternity and Children’s Data Set has been developed as a key driver to achieving better outcomes of care for mothers, babies and children. The data set will provide comparative, mother and child-centric data that will include information on incidence and care that can be used to improve clinical quality and service efficiency; and to commission services in a way that improves health and reduces inequalities. The child health element of the data set covers all stages of the care pathway across primary, secondary and tertiary sectors from birth until the day before the 19th birthday and/or transition into adult services. The initial data collection will concentrate on the data required to support the Healthy Child Programme and will for the first time:

Data Collection

The Children and Young People's Health Services Data Set (also known as the Children and Young People's Health Service Secondary Uses Data Set) provides the definitions for data:

Data is expected to be collected from various clinical systems, collated and assembled through the compiler. This standard is intended to facilitate electronic data recording and reporting but it is not intended to create clinical records for Children's and Young People's Health Services or to enable other systems to interoperate with other clinical systems.

Submission Information

The Children and Young People's Health Services Data Set is submitted to the Health and Social Care Information Centre (HSCIC) using the Children and Young People's Health Services Data Set XML Schema.

Format Information

Data for submission will be formatted into an XML file as per the Technology Reference Data Update Distribution Service (TRUD) page at: NHS Data Model and Dictionary: DD XML Schemas.

For enquires regarding the XML Schema, please contact the Health and Social Care Information Centre at enquiries@hscic.gov.uk.

Further Guidance

Further information and implementation guidance has been produced by the Health and Social Care Information Centre (HSCIC) and is available at: Children and Young People's Health Services Data Set.