

Reconstructing Lives: What does Linking 118 Years of Data Reveal?
For anyone exploring how historical data can transform digital healthcare delivery and population health insights.
What killed Scottish mothers during the 1918 flu pandemic? How did coal mining really affect miners' lifespans? Prof Peter Christen (20,000+ citations, world-leading record linkage expert) reveals how the Scottish Historic Population Platform (SHiPP) is reconstructing every Scottish life from 1855-1973 by linking millions of vital records.
You'll see:
Real impact: Spanish flu on maternal mortality, coal miners' health trajectories
Privacy-preserving methods for linking modern health records at scale
How the right database answers questions we didn't know we could ask
Perfect for anyone working at the intersection of data, history, and health policy—where linking historical patterns illuminates future digital health strategies.
Prof Christen: 25+ years linking administrative data, author of "Data Matching" and "Linking Sensitive Data"