Author: Foraker, Randi E.; Lai, Albert M.; Kannampallil, Thomas G.; Woeltje, Keith F.; Trolard, Anne M.; Payne, Philip R. O.
Title: Transmission dynamics: Data sharing in the COVIDâ€19 era Cord-id: t1hwh3o8 Document date: 2020_6_28
ID: t1hwh3o8
Snippet: PROBLEM: The current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic underscores the need for building and sustaining public health data infrastructure to support a rapid local, regional, national, and international response. Despite a historical context of public health crises, data sharing agreements and transactional standards do not uniformly exist between institutions which hamper a foundational infrastructure to meet data sharing and integration needs for the advancement of public health. A
Document: PROBLEM: The current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic underscores the need for building and sustaining public health data infrastructure to support a rapid local, regional, national, and international response. Despite a historical context of public health crises, data sharing agreements and transactional standards do not uniformly exist between institutions which hamper a foundational infrastructure to meet data sharing and integration needs for the advancement of public health. APPROACH: There is a growing need to apply population health knowledge with technological solutions to data transfer, integration, and reasoning, to improve health in a broader learning health system ecosystem. To achieve this, data must be combined from healthcare provider organizations, public health departments, and other settings. Public health entities are in a unique position to consume these data, however, most do not yet have the infrastructure required to integrate data sources and apply computable knowledge to combat this pandemic. OUTCOMES: Herein, we describe lessons learned and a framework to address these needs, which focus on: (a) identifying and filling technology “gapsâ€; (b) pursuing collaborative design of data sharing requirements and transmission mechanisms; (c) facilitating crossâ€domain discussions involving legal and research compliance; and (d) establishing or participating in multiâ€institutional convening or coordinating activities. NEXT STEPS: While by no means a comprehensive evaluation of such issues, we envision that many of our experiences are universal. We hope those elucidated can serve as the catalyst for a robust communityâ€wide dialogue on what steps can and should be taken to ensure that our regional and national health care systems can truly learn, in a rapid manner, so as to respond to this and future emergent public health crises.
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