SEER-Medicare: About the Data Files
The current SEER-Medicare linkage is updated biennially. As of December 2012,
the data include all Medicare eligible persons appearing in the SEER data who
were diagnosed with cancer through 2009, and their Medicare claims through 2010.
There are a large number of people and records per person in the SEER-Medicare
data. Given the vast amount of data, the term "SEER-Medicare data" actually
refers to a series of files. One file includes SEER
data. The remaining files are the Medicare files
for specific types of service, e.g. hospital, physician, outpatient, etc.
There are two cohorts of people included in the SEER-Medicare data -- persons with
cancer and a random sample of Medicare beneficiaries who do not have cancer. The
"non-cancer" group is drawn from a random 5 percent sample of Medicare beneficiaries
residing in the SEER areas. Persons in the 5 percent sample who also appear in the SEER
data are removed, leaving a sample of non-cancer cases. Medicare claims are available for
the non-cancer cases in the same format as for the cancer cases. Information from the
non-cancer group can be used for comparative purposes, such as the cost of care or the
use of specific tests or procedures among a random sample of Medicare beneficiaries who do
not have cancer. Data for the non-cancer cases can also be used with the data for the
cancer cases to conduct population-based analyses of testing, treatment, and costs within
the SEER areas.
For the cancer cases, investigators may link individual patients across files using the
unique SEER case ID number. The SEER case ID number consists of an 8-digit case number and
a 2-digit registry ID which when combined, uniquely identify each individual in the data.
For persons in the non-cancer group, investigators may link their files using an encrypted
Health Insurance Claim number that is unique to each individual.
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