BIB
Born in Bradford...
Description
Born in Bradford (BiB) started in 2007 as a response to the poor health outcomes for children in Bradford. Pregnant women were recruited when they attended the Bradford Royal Infirmary for their routine maternity care. Participants were asked to comp...
General Design
- Type
- Cohort study
- Cohort type
- Birth cohort
- Data collection type
- Retrospective, Prospective
- Design
- Longitudinal
- Start/End data collection
- 2007 (ongoing)
- Design paper
- Cohort Profile: the Born in Bradford multi-ethnic family cohort study.
Population
- Regions
- Bradford
- Number of participants
- 12453
Organisations
Lead organisations
- Bradford Royal Infirmary (BRI)United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (the)
Contributors
Subpopulations
List of subpopulations for this resource...
Name | Description | Number of participants |
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Collection events
List of collection events defined for this resource...
Name | Description | Participants | Start end year |
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Datasets
List of datasets for this resource...
Name | Description |
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Networks
Part of networks...
Publications
Born in Bradford, a cohort study of babies born in Bradford, and their parents: protocol for the recruitment phase
Cohort Profile: the Born in Bradford multi-ethnic family cohort study.
Design and characteristics of a new birth cohort, to study the early origins and ethnic variation of childhood obesity: the BiB1000 study
Growing up in Bradford: protocol for the age 7���������11 follow up of the Born
Access conditions
Born in Bradford allows researchers to apply to access the study data through the BiB Executive Group. Researchers need to submit an EOI form to borninbradford@bthft.nhs.uk and the EOI will be reviewed at the monthly BiB Exec. Information about t...
- Data access conditions
- general research use
- Data use conditions
- return to database or resource
- Release type
- Closed dataset
- Linkage options
- No
Funding & Acknowledgements
- Funding
- BiB receives core infrastructure funding from the Wellcome Trust (WT101597MA) and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) under its Applied Research Collaboration Yorkshire and Humber [NIHR200166]. Further support for genome-wide and multiple ‘omics measurements is from the UK Medical Research Council (G0600705), National Institute of Health Research (NF-SI-0611-10196), US National Institute of Health (R01 DK10324), and the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013) / ERC grant agreement no 669545. The recent follow-up of BiB participants was funded by a joint grant from the UK Medical Research Council and UK Economic and Social Science Research Council (MR/N024397/1) and a grant from the British Heart Foundation (CS/16/4/32482.)
- Acknowledgements
- Born in Bradford is only possible because of the enthusiasm and commitment of the children and parents in BiB. We are grateful to all the participants, health professionals, schools and researchers who have made Born in Bradford happen.