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Exploring the coding of migration status in English primary care from 2011 to 2025 using OpenCodeCounts

Title: Exploring the coding of migration status in English primary care from 2011 to 2025 using OpenCodeCounts
Authors: Boukari, Y; Hiam, L; Scuffell, J; Tamborska, A; Burns, R; Wiedemann, M; Campos-Matos, I; Aldridge, RW; Walsh, P; Hargreaves, S; Pathak, N; Goldacre, B; Hulme, WJ
Publisher Information: Royal College of General Practitioners
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: St George's University of London: Repository
Description: Background The migration status of the 9.8 million migrants living in England is not consistently recorded in primary care electronic health records (EHRs). Codelist approaches enable creation of cohorts of individuals who have had a predefined, optional migration-related code (e.g. “refugee”) added to their EHR. Aims We aimed to explore the use of migration-related SNOMED CT codes to inform future research using primary care data. Design & setting We used our OpenCodeCounts tool to explore data published by NHS England on SNOMED CT code usage in English primary care. Method We created migration-related codelists and described their use from 1st August 2011 to 31st July 2025. To understand code usage in the context of known information on migrants in England, we compared code usage to trends in migration-related statistics from the Home Office and the 2021 Census. Results There were 34.2 million uses of 1119 migration-related codes from 2011 to 2025. Migration-related coding increased over time, generally exceeding the increase observed for coding overall, with a sharp increase from 2020, particularly for country-of-birth and language. Language-related coding represented 65% of code usage and where country of birth was recorded, there was mixed agreement with the Census. Coding of immigration legal statuses was low and overwhelmingly about asylum/refugee status. Conclusion Utilising OpenCodeCounts, we demonstrate the feasibility of using migration-related SNOMED CT codelists within primary care EHRs and highlight some of the potential biases that cohorts created based on these codelists may have to inform future research.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
ISSN: 2398-3795
Relation: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/118515/1/BJGPO.2025.0138.full.pdf; Boukari, Y; Hiam, L; Scuffell, J; Tamborska, A; Burns, R; Wiedemann, M; Campos-Matos, I; Aldridge, RW; Walsh, P; Hargreaves, S; et al. Boukari, Y; Hiam, L; Scuffell, J; Tamborska, A; Burns, R; Wiedemann, M; Campos-Matos, I; Aldridge, RW; Walsh, P; Hargreaves, S; Pathak, N; Goldacre, B; Hulme, WJ (2026) Exploring the coding of migration status in English primary care from 2011 to 2025 using OpenCodeCounts. BJGP Open. BJGPO.2025.0138-BJGPO.2025.0138. ISSN 2398-3795 https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgpo.2025.0138 SGUL Authors: Hargreaves, Sally
DOI: 10.3399/bjgpo.2025.0138
Availability: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/118515/; https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/118515/1/BJGPO.2025.0138.full.pdf; https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgpo.2025.0138
Rights: cc_by_4
Accession Number: edsbas.772A06A9
Database: BASE