HHARP: The Historical Hospital Admission Records Project – a review

Hospital records have frequently been used in epidemiological research (Kilgore et al. 2017; Rushton 2016), and in some cases palaeopathological research. However, the availability of data is problematic, with written records requiring considerable time to interpret, digitise and analyse. In 2001, t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cara Hirst
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of York 2018-04-01
Series:Internet Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue47/6/index.html
_version_ 1827266600316698624
author Cara Hirst
author_facet Cara Hirst
author_sort Cara Hirst
collection DOAJ
description Hospital records have frequently been used in epidemiological research (Kilgore et al. 2017; Rushton 2016), and in some cases palaeopathological research. However, the availability of data is problematic, with written records requiring considerable time to interpret, digitise and analyse. In 2001, the Historical Hospital Records Project (HHARP) began digitising over 140,000 hospital admission records from four hospitals in London and Glasgow, providing researchers with an online data base of hospital records (Figure 1). I review the data available in the HHARP database, as well as make a preliminary analysis of the hospital records from London and Glasgow between c.1852-1921 which illustrates the value of the HHARP database in understanding disease and medical care during this period.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T07:05:26Z
format Article
id doaj.art-1b636adbf66947278ca68055c5187eaf
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1363-5387
language English
last_indexed 2025-03-22T04:20:25Z
publishDate 2018-04-01
publisher University of York
record_format Article
series Internet Archaeology
spelling doaj.art-1b636adbf66947278ca68055c5187eaf2024-04-28T07:44:44ZengUniversity of YorkInternet Archaeology1363-53872018-04-014710.11141/ia.47.6HHARP: The Historical Hospital Admission Records Project – a reviewCara Hirst0University College LondonHospital records have frequently been used in epidemiological research (Kilgore et al. 2017; Rushton 2016), and in some cases palaeopathological research. However, the availability of data is problematic, with written records requiring considerable time to interpret, digitise and analyse. In 2001, the Historical Hospital Records Project (HHARP) began digitising over 140,000 hospital admission records from four hospitals in London and Glasgow, providing researchers with an online data base of hospital records (Figure 1). I review the data available in the HHARP database, as well as make a preliminary analysis of the hospital records from London and Glasgow between c.1852-1921 which illustrates the value of the HHARP database in understanding disease and medical care during this period.http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue47/6/index.htmlpalaeopathologyhistoric recordschildhood illnessdiseasepatienthospital
spellingShingle Cara Hirst
HHARP: The Historical Hospital Admission Records Project – a review
Internet Archaeology
palaeopathology
historic records
childhood illness
disease
patient
hospital
title HHARP: The Historical Hospital Admission Records Project – a review
title_full HHARP: The Historical Hospital Admission Records Project – a review
title_fullStr HHARP: The Historical Hospital Admission Records Project – a review
title_full_unstemmed HHARP: The Historical Hospital Admission Records Project – a review
title_short HHARP: The Historical Hospital Admission Records Project – a review
title_sort hharp the historical hospital admission records project a review
topic palaeopathology
historic records
childhood illness
disease
patient
hospital
url http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue47/6/index.html
work_keys_str_mv AT carahirst hharpthehistoricalhospitaladmissionrecordsprojectareview