29 Oct 2024
Danish National Archives are digitalizing historical medical birth records
TAGS

An initiative by the Danish National Archives, in partnership with the Center for Clinical Research and Prevention and Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen, is underway to digitize historical medical birth records using AI. Paper records for over four million individuals born between 1926 and the 1970s are being transformed into a digital database.

The project, funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation, is expected to be completed by 2029. Once finalized, the database will be made readily available to researchers under the usual regulations governing access to national data in Denmark. 

For more information please click here. 

More News

27 September 2024

Join the Measuring Adult Mortality Community of Practice (MAM-CoP) on Monday 30 September 2024 for…

27 September 2024

A new international standard for how to test for equitability and bias in biometric systems has…

27 September 2024

The CRVS Applied Research Training (CART) initiative, launched in March 2024, aims to enhance Civil…

27 September 2024

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Indonesia, in partnership with the…

27 September 2024

A recently published research article documents the sharp improvement in on-time birth registration…

27 September 2024

ESCAP's Statistics Division has released a Stats Brief on Understanding and Improving Adult…

27 September 2024

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Target 16.9 focuses on providing legal identity for all,…

27 September 2024

A report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) reveals an immanent gender…

27 September 2024

The Pacific Community (SPC) released a report on Assessment, Analysis and Redesign of the CRVS…

27 September 2024

Our community newsletter puts a spotlight on people who have gone above and beyond in their efforts…