3302.0.55.004 - Information Paper: Death registrations to Census linkage project - Methodology and Quality Assessment, 2011-2012
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 18/09/2013 First Issue
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NO CENSUS RECORD
Some of these reasons may be more applicable than others for people who were alive at the time of the Census but subsequently died in the ensuing year. In a small number of cases, the absence of a Census form could be the result of the person being overseas at the time of the Census but subsequently dying in Australia and the death registered during the linkage reference period. Rolling enumeration procedures for Census in remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities may have increased the likelihood of an equivalent Census record not existing for deaths occurring around the time of the Census. Rolling enumeration involves conducting the Census over an extended period of four weeks. In these instances it is possible that a resident who moved may have been missed and therefore a corresponding Census record would not exist, or they may have passed away after Census Night (9 August 2011) but before Census enumeration was conducted in their residential area. The pattern of linkage by month of death indicates that people who are close to death may well be missed, perhaps due to illness, or included in summary forms only on the Census. The months that contained the highest rate of unlinked records were those closest to Census Night: August (10%) and September (8%). Graph 3.1 - UNLINKED DEATH REGISTRATIONS, By month of death Specially targeted linkages based only on address matching identified a small number of instances where a potential link to the death registration was found either on a Census summary form or on a Census household form but listed as a ‘person temporarily absent’ (PTA). A confirmed link could not be assigned in these instances, however, since insufficient personal information was available.
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