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Rationale and Design of the Hamburg City Health Study

[journal article]

Jagodzinski, Annika
Johansen, Christoffer
Koch‑Gromus, Uwe
Aarabi, Ghazal
Adam, Gerhard
Anders, Sven
Augustin, Matthias
der Kellen, Ramona B.
Beikler, Thomas
Behrendt, Christian-Alexander
Betz, Christian S.
Bokemeyer, Carsten
Borof, Katrin
Briken, Peer
Busch, Chia-Jung
Büchel, Christian
Brassen, Stefanie
Debus, Eike S.
Eggers, Larissa
Fiehler, Jens
Gallinat, Jürgen
Gellißen, Simone
Gerloff, Christian
Girdauskas, Evaldas
Gosau, Martin
Graefen, Markus
Härter, Martin
Harth, Volker
Heidemann, Christoph
Heydecke, Guido
Huber, Tobias B.
Hussein, Yassin
Kampf, Marvin O.
Knesebeck, Olaf von dem
Konnopka, Alexander
König, Hans-Helmut
Kromer, Robert
Kubisch, Christian
Kühn, Simone
Loges, Sonja
Löwe, Bernd
Lund, Gunnar
Meyer, Christian
Nagel, Lina
Nienhaus, Albert
Pantel, Klaus
Petersen, Elina
Püschel, Klaus
Reichenspurner, Hermann
Sauter, Guido
Scherer, Martin
Scherschel, Katharina
Schiffner, Ulrich
Schnabel, Renate B.
Schulz, Holger
Smeets, Ralf
Sokalskis, Vladislavs
Spitzer, Martin S.
Terschüren, Claudia
Thederan, Imke
Thoma, Tom
Thomalla, Götz
Waschki, Benjamin
Wegscheider, Karl
Wenzel, Jan-Per
Wiese, Susanne
Zyriax, Birgit-Christiane
Zeller, Tanja
Blankenberg, Stefan

Abstract

The Hamburg City Health Study (HCHS) is a large, prospective, long-term, population-based cohort study and a unique research platform and network to obtain substantial knowledge about several important risk and prognostic factors in major chronic diseases. A random sample of 45,000 participants betw... view more

The Hamburg City Health Study (HCHS) is a large, prospective, long-term, population-based cohort study and a unique research platform and network to obtain substantial knowledge about several important risk and prognostic factors in major chronic diseases. A random sample of 45,000 participants between 45 and 74 years of age from the general population of Hamburg, Germany, are taking part in an extensive baseline assessment at one dedicated study center. Participants undergo 13 validated and 5 novel examinations primarily targeting major organ system function and structures including extensive imaging examinations. The protocol includes validate self-reports via questionnaires regarding lifestyle and environmental conditions, dietary habits, physical condition and activity, sexual dysfunction, professional life, psychosocial context and burden, quality of life, digital media use, occupational, medical and family history as well as healthcare utilization. The assessment is completed by genomic and proteomic characterization. Beyond the identification of classical risk factors for major chronic diseases and survivorship, the core intention is to gather valid prevalence and incidence, and to develop complex models predicting health outcomes based on a multitude of examination data, imaging, biomarker, psychosocial and behavioral assessments. Participants at risk for coronary artery disease, atrial fibrillation, heart failure, stroke and dementia are invited for a visit to conduct an additional MRI examination of either heart or brain. Endpoint assessment of the overall sample will be completed through repeated follow-up examinations and surveys as well as related individual routine data from involved health and pension insurances. The study is targeting the complex relationship between biologic and psychosocial risk and resilience factors, chronic disease, health care use, survivorship and health as well as favorable and bad prognosis within a unique, large-scale long-term assessment with the perspective of further examinations after 6 years in a representative European metropolitan population.... view less

Keywords
nutrition; prognosis; heart disease; adipositas; risk; prophylaxis; cancer; chronic illness; Federal Republic of Germany; Hamburg; stroke; epidemiology; mental illness; dementia; resilience; longitudinal study; public health; life style; health care; health

Classification
Medicine, Social Medicine

Free Keywords
Prospective cohort study; Risk factors; Coronary heart disease; Vascular diseases; Oral health; Psychiatric and psychosomatic disorders; Ocular diseases; Respiratory diseases; Obesity; Sexual dysfunction; Survivorship; MRI imaging; Cardiac MRI; Brain MRI; Health service research; Mikrozensus

Document language
English

Publication Year
2020

Page/Pages
p. 169-181

Journal
European Journal of Epidemiology, 35 (2020) 2

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10654-019-00577-4

ISSN
1573-7284

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0

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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.