State-Level Vital Statistics Data

Vital statistics jurisdictions

Individual-level data about births, deaths, marriages, and divorces in the 57 vital records jurisdictions, which include all 50 states, the District of Columbia, NYC, and five US territories.

Unit of Observation:
Individual
Personally Identifiable Information Available for Linking:
Yes
Geography:
United States of America
Years Available:
Varies by jurisdiction. Electronic records that can be requested for research often only go back to the 1990s, though data collection of vital records typically dates back to the early 1900s.
Cost:
Vital records offices usually charge a fee for the time required to prepare the data request.
Frequency of Updates:
Varies by jurisdiction.
Universe:

Varies by jurisdiction. It generally includes vital records occurring within a particular geography for all residents and non-residents, but may also include vital events for state residents occurring out of state. For instance, California vital records contain information on California residents and non-residents occurring in the state, as well as vital events for California residents occurring out of state. Oregon vital records includes events occurring in Oregon for residents and non-residents, but does not include events for Oregon residents that occur elsewhere.

Access

Vital records data, which may include information about births, deaths, fetal deaths, induced terminations of pregnancies, marriages, and divorces, are maintained by 57 different jurisdictions in the US. These include the 50 states, The District of Columbia, New York City, and five US territories (Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands). Vital records information is collected from an array of local entities (hospitals, funeral homes, etc.) and sent to national agencies for the compilation of national statistics. However, legal authority over the data is maintained by these 57 state-level jurisdictions. Data requests should therefore be made to the relevant state-level jurisdiction.


Marriage and divorce records are considered public records in most jurisdictions, while birth and death records are much more likely to be considered confidential and exempt from public disclosure. For details about whether particular vital records are public in each state, see this website. It is worth noting that states that consider recent birth or death data to be public record often restrict associated health data, and therefore a data request may still be necessary. For instance, Montana makes death records publicly available but restricts access to information about the cause of death. Minnesota makes death records publicly available and includes cause of death, but restricts health information in publicly available birth records. Furthermore, while information about births in Minnesota when parents are married is made public, when parents are not married this data only becomes public if the mother grants permission. A 2018 report by Fitch et al. claims that, “in practice, this restricts public use data to about 90% of the total Minnesota birth cohort in recent years.” The rest of this entry will focus primarily on data access procedures for birth, death and fetal death records with full health information.


Data requests for identifiable birth, death, and fetal death records can generally be submitted to the respective state-level vital statistics office, which will typically be housed within the department of health and human services or other public health departments. Requests typically require a Data Use Agreement. This NCHS resource “Where to Write for Vital Records”  provides links to the office responsible for vital records data in each state or other vital records jurisdiction. 


For examples of access procedures in specific jurisdictions, see other J-PAL catalog entries on obtaining vital statistics information in Colorado, Massachusetts, New York City, Oregon, and South Carolina. See also the “Compendium of Administrative Data Sources” by the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation for access procedures in California. If a particular jurisdiction doesn’t have access procedures for research requests online, they may have relevant information in vital statistics legislation. As one example, the text below from North Carolina’s General Statutes, Chapter 130A Article 4 on Vital Statistics outlines who is able to access the data and for what purpose:


Copies of or abstracts from any computer or microform database which contains individual-specific health or medical birth data, whether the database is maintained by the Department, a local health department, or any other public official, shall be provided only to an individual requesting his or her own data, a person authorized by that individual, or a person who will use the information for medical research purposes. The State Registrar shall adopt rules providing for the use of this information for medical research purposes. The rules shall, at a minimum, require a written description of the proposed use of the data, including protocols for protecting confidentiality of the data.

All vital records jurisdictions use an Electronic Birth Registration System (EBRS) for all processing related to birth certificates, and nearly all jurisdictions (52) use an Electronic Death Registration System (EDRS) for processing related to deaths. Requested data will typically be shared in the form of electronic records, as opposed to hard copies of certificates.


There is a high degree of uniformity with data collection across states.
Vital statistics offices work closely with the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) under the Vital Statistics Cooperative Program (VSCP) to ensure a high degree of uniformity across jurisdictions. States and other vital statistics jurisdictions base their record collection processes on standardized certificates developed for reporting births, deaths, marriages, divorces, fetal deaths, and induced terminations of pregnancies. These certificates undergo periodic revisions (every 10 to 15 years) and while individual jurisdictions have some autonomy with implementation, they typically adopt new reporting standards with a high degree of fidelity. States are funded to report required data elements to NCHS. As a result of this cooperative system, vital records data across jurisdictions should be highly comparable.


The NCHS also develops and maintains the Model State Vital Statistics Law and Regulations to provide guidance to individual jurisdictions as they update their own vital records legislations and further promote uniformity among “definitions, registration practices, disclosure and issuance procedures, and in many other functions that comprise a State system of vital statistics.” The Model State Vital Statistics Law and Regulations also provides guidance about vital records jurisdictions making their data accessible to researchers upon request. Most, if not all, jurisdictions seem to follow this guidance and make their data accessible to researchers.


Considerations for requesting vital records data at the state level vs national level.
Some national vital data can be obtained through a request to the NCHS.  This might be worth considering if you need data from multiple jurisdictions. Birth records obtained through the NCHS will be deidentified, and unless the request comes from a federal employee, dates will be approximated. To obtain personally identifiable birth records and to be able to link vital records data to your study data or other data sources, vital statistics must be requested from the state, city or territory with legal jurisdiction. See the National Vital Statistics Birth and Death Data catalog entry for more information about accessing de-identified birth, death and fetal data records from the NCHS.


If only death records are needed, these can be requested with personally identifiable information from the NCHS through the National Death Index, a database created specifically to assist researchers with medical and health studies. For more information on the access procedures, see the National Death Index catalog entry.


Note that the NCHS once collected marriage and divorce records but discontinued this collection in 1995. More recent marriage and divorce records must be obtained from individual states.

Timeline for Access

Varies by jurisdiction. There may be a one- to two- year lag before final data is released. Some jurisdictions release preliminary data ahead of the final release.

Cost

A fee may be imposed to account for programming and data preparation activities. This varies by data provider.

Linking

Varies by jurisdiction. Linking is generally allowed, but may require special permission. For instance, researchers attempting to obtain vital records in Oregon need permission from the Oregon DHS-HS IRB to link vital records with any other dataset, including their own study sample. Linking procedures may differ for birth and death data. In Massachusetts, researchers can receive the necessary information from death records to perform the match on their own, while identifying information on birth data is rarely shared. Matching for Massachusetts birth records is typically conducted by the vital statistics registry and only de-identified information is given to researchers.

Data Contents

Vital records data typically contains independent datasets for birth, death, and fetal death records. Fetal death refers to the unintentional death of the fetus in utero at any time during a pregnancy. Most states report fetal deaths that have reached at least 20 weeks of gestation, and/or 350 grams.


See this web page from the NCHS for standard certificates for live birth, death and fetal death certificates. Data collected in different jurisdictions may deviate slightly from these recommended elements, but these should provide a pretty good overview of what information most individual jurisdictions collect.


Note that some jurisdictions will restrict certain variables they consider particularly sensitive. For example, the Texas Center for Health Statistics, which handles research requests for vital records data in Texas, will not provide information that provide or imply HIV or STD status to anyone outside of the Texas Department of State Health Services.

Partial List of Variables

Births: mother’s age at time of delivery, mother’s county of residence, marital status of mother at time of delivery, educational attainment of parents, prenatal care, risk factors for pregnancy, previous pregnancies, birth weight, gestational age, characteristics of newborn, congenital anomalies, delivery method, place of birth


Deaths: causes of death (ICD-10), place of death, injury information, age, race, sex, educational attainment, occupation, county of residence, birth place, family members


Fetal Death: parent’s names, parent’s dates of birth, parent’s demographics, mother’s health, mother’s pregnancy history, mother’s prenatal care, gestational age, birthweight, cause of death, congenital anomalies, county of residence, place of delivery

J-PAL Randomized Evaluations Using this Data Set

Bertrand, Marianne and Sendhil Mullainathan. 2004. “Are Emily and Greg More Employable than Lakisha and Jamal? A Field Experiment on Labor Market Discrimination.” The American Economic Review, 94(4): 991-1013.

Finkelstein, Amy, Sarah Taubman, Bill Wright, Mira Bernstein, Jonathan Gruber, Joseph P. Newhouse, Heidi Allen, Katherine Baicker, and the Oregon Health Study Group. 2012. "The Oregon Health Insurance Experiment: Evidence from the First Year." Quarterly Journal of Economics 127(3): 1057-1106.

Gelber, Alexander, Adam Issen and Judd B. Kessler. 2016. “The Effects of Youth Employment: Evidence from New York City Lotteries.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 131 (1): 423-460.

Other Research Using this Data Set

See catalog entries for individual state-level jurisdictions for other research using this data

Other Documentation

General information about the Vital Statistics record collection system:
National Research Council. (2009). Vital Statistics: Summary of a Workshop. Michael J. Siri and Daniel L. Cork, rapporteurs. Committee on National Statistics Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK219884/


Parrish, R. Gibson. (2018). Vital Records and Vital Statistics in the United States: Uses, Users, Systems, and Sources of Revenue. Conducted for the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics Subcommittee on Population Health. https://ncvhs.hhs.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/NCVHS_Vital_Records_Uses_Costs_Feb_23_2018-1.pdf


Resource from OPRE that also documents access procedures for state-level vital records data, and details procedures from California:
Holman, Daron, Alexandra Pennington, Kelsey Schaberg, and Andrew Rock. 2020. Compendium of Administrative Data Sources for Self-Sufficiency Research. OPRE Report 2020-42. Washington, DC: Office of Planning, Research, and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. https://www.acf.hhs.gov/opre/report/compendium-administrative-data-sources-self-sufficiency-research


Article that contains a summary of prior literature assessing the reliability and validity of birth record data: Vinikoor, L. C., Messer, L. C., Laraia, B. A., & Kaufman, J. S. (2010). Reliability of variables on the North Carolina birth certificate: a comparison with directly queried values from a cohort study. Paediatric and perinatal epidemiology, 24(1), 102–112. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3016.2009.01087.x

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