Data Resource Profile : The Scottish Combined Medicines Dataset (SCoMeD)

Mueller, Tanja and Jarvis, Lynne and Stark, Victoria and Millar, Morven and Hynd, Amy and Pauline, Elaine and Kurdi, Amanj and Stobo, Laura and McTaggart, Stuart and Bennie, Marion (2026) Data Resource Profile : The Scottish Combined Medicines Dataset (SCoMeD). International Journal of Population Data Science, 8 (6). 14. ISSN 2399-4908 (https://doi.org/10.23889/ijpds.v8i6.3006)

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Abstract

Introduction: Prescribing data has been collected electronically in Scotland for many years; however, data are collated in individual, non-overlapping datasets based on the origin of the prescription (e.g., primary or secondary care). The vision was to create a unified view of all prescribing data to provide a longitudinal dataset of medicines use for patients treated by the National Health Services (NHS) Scotland, irrespective of where or how that care was provided. Methods: The Scottish Combined Medicines Dataset (SCoMeD) is, in essence, a data virtualisation tool collating information from three previously available prescribing datasets: the Prescribing Information System (PIS); the Hospital Electronic Prescribing and Medicines Administration (HEPMA) national dataset; and the Homecare Medicines (HCM) dataset. This allows the creation of study cohorts (patient groups of interest) that meet specified criteria across all prescribing settings and facilitates the retrieval of the prescribing history for individuals pre-identified from other datasets. Records contain a unique patient identifier (Community Health Index number) which is used to identify patients for inclusion in the dataset and also enables linkage to other routinely collected data, including hospital admission episodes and death records. Results: SCoMeD contains details on the patient (age, sex, geographical information) and on the medication prescribed. Medication-related information includes what was received and when; strength and dose information are also available. The earliest date of data availability depends on the source (PIS, 01.2010; HEPMA, 07.2022; HCM, 01.2019). Data is held by Public Health Scotland. Conclusion: SCoMeD facilitates a range of different studies, including cross-sectional/point-prevalence studies and drug utilisation studies as well as longitudinal studies, e.g., cohort and case-control studies. With the possibility to link to other relevant datasets, additional areas of interest may include health policy evaluations and health economics studies. Access to data is subject to approval; researchers need to contact the electronic Data Research and Innovation Service in the first instance.

ORCID iDs

Mueller, Tanja ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0418-4789, Jarvis, Lynne, Stark, Victoria, Millar, Morven, Hynd, Amy, Pauline, Elaine, Kurdi, Amanj ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5036-1988, Stobo, Laura, McTaggart, Stuart and Bennie, Marion ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4046-629X;