Cohort profile: Family cohort
Cohort profile: Family cohort
The FAMILY Cohort is a longitudinal study of health, happiness and family harmony (the '3Hs') at individual, household and neighbourhood levels in Hong Kong. Using a family living in the same household as the sampling unit, the study (n ¼ 20 279 households and 46 001 participants) consists of a composite sample from several sources, including: a population-representative random core sample (n ¼ 8115 households and 19 533 participants); the first-degree relatives of this sample (n ¼ 4658 households and 11 063 participants); and oversampling in three new towns (n ¼ 2891 households and 7645 participants) and in three population subgroups with anticipated changes in family dynamics (n ¼ 909 households and 2160 participants). Two household visits and five telephone- or web-based follow-ups were conducted over 2009-14. Data collected include socio-demographics, anthropometrics, lifestyle and behavioural factors, measures of social capital, and standardized instruments assessing the 3Hs. We also intend to collect biomaterials in future. The analytical plan includes multilevel inter-relations of the 3Hs for individuals, households, extended families and neighbourhoods. With Hong Kong's recent history of socioeconomic development, the FAMILY Cohort is therefore relevant to global urban populations currently experiencing similarly rapid economic growth. The FAMILY Cohort is currently set up as a supported access resource.
Leung, Gabriel M.
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Ni, Michael Y.
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Wong, Paul T.K.
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Lee, Paul H.
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Chan, Brandford H.Y.
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Stewart, Sunita M.
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Mary Schooling, C.
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Johnston, Janice M.
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Lam, Wendy W.T.
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Chan, Sophia S.C.
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McDowell, Ian
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Lam, Tai Hing
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April 2017
Leung, Gabriel M.
05520107-4b1b-4adf-a291-20f4d8941219
Ni, Michael Y.
d4ede6a1-1996-4b38-801a-e7af166d5556
Wong, Paul T.K.
0bbc887f-075b-40aa-87e0-a015f120eca0
Lee, Paul H.
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
Chan, Brandford H.Y.
d28afceb-da03-4d13-a414-a7d532396195
Stewart, Sunita M.
0a7cdd7b-a005-43fa-9b62-f648894630fe
Mary Schooling, C.
779356d2-f4ba-4ce9-a9b2-bfb18558c42d
Johnston, Janice M.
fc09bc03-5ab9-4d67-a3d8-df40769c6eb9
Lam, Wendy W.T.
592ca5c1-aa8e-43d4-9dbb-362c055c1476
Chan, Sophia S.C.
b53e6885-5607-441c-aa7b-a0e590341e8a
McDowell, Ian
d45606ed-356e-4ab0-9611-a106f332959e
Lam, Tai Hing
d80fce96-6419-48bc-b09f-0a7152c97b83
Leung, Gabriel M., Ni, Michael Y., Wong, Paul T.K. and Lee, Paul H.
,
et al.
(2017)
Cohort profile: Family cohort.
International Journal of Epidemiology, 46 (2), [e1].
(doi:10.1093/ije/dyu257).
Abstract
The FAMILY Cohort is a longitudinal study of health, happiness and family harmony (the '3Hs') at individual, household and neighbourhood levels in Hong Kong. Using a family living in the same household as the sampling unit, the study (n ¼ 20 279 households and 46 001 participants) consists of a composite sample from several sources, including: a population-representative random core sample (n ¼ 8115 households and 19 533 participants); the first-degree relatives of this sample (n ¼ 4658 households and 11 063 participants); and oversampling in three new towns (n ¼ 2891 households and 7645 participants) and in three population subgroups with anticipated changes in family dynamics (n ¼ 909 households and 2160 participants). Two household visits and five telephone- or web-based follow-ups were conducted over 2009-14. Data collected include socio-demographics, anthropometrics, lifestyle and behavioural factors, measures of social capital, and standardized instruments assessing the 3Hs. We also intend to collect biomaterials in future. The analytical plan includes multilevel inter-relations of the 3Hs for individuals, households, extended families and neighbourhoods. With Hong Kong's recent history of socioeconomic development, the FAMILY Cohort is therefore relevant to global urban populations currently experiencing similarly rapid economic growth. The FAMILY Cohort is currently set up as a supported access resource.
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More information
Published date: April 2017
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
The Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust was the sole funder of the FAMILY Project from 2007 to 2014.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author 2015; all rights reserved. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 475146
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475146
ISSN: 0300-5771
PURE UUID: f7e6018f-25d9-4f03-a3ac-cf97e0619187
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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2023 17:43
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:09
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Contributors
Author:
Gabriel M. Leung
Author:
Michael Y. Ni
Author:
Paul T.K. Wong
Author:
Paul H. Lee
Author:
Brandford H.Y. Chan
Author:
Sunita M. Stewart
Author:
C. Mary Schooling
Author:
Janice M. Johnston
Author:
Wendy W.T. Lam
Author:
Sophia S.C. Chan
Author:
Ian McDowell
Author:
Tai Hing Lam
Corporate Author: et al.
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