3.8 Article

Addressing the Covid-19 pandemic and future public health challenges through global collaboration and a data-driven systems approach

Journal

LEARNING HEALTH SYSTEMS
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lrh2.10253

Keywords

Covid-19; data-driven health systems; standardized health data

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Covid-19 demonstrates global public health challenges do not respect national boundaries, impacting lives, health, and economies worldwide. Rapid learning for addressing pandemics like Covid-19 requires a systematic approach with data sharing and a standards-based system, augmented by technology to ensure scientific integrity. Collaborations like the transatlantic effort aim to propose frameworks for managing crises and preparing for future health challenges.
Covid-19 has already taught us that the greatest public health challenges of our generation will show no respect for national boundaries, will impact lives and health of people of all nations, and will affect economies and quality of life in unprecedented ways. The types of rapid learning envisioned to address Covid-19 and future public health crises require a systems approach that enables sharing of data and lessons learned at scale. Agreement on a systems approach augmented by technology and standards will be foundational to making such learning meaningful and to ensuring its scientific integrity. With this purpose in mind, a group of individuals from Spain, Italy, and the United States have formed a transatlantic collaboration, with the aim of generating a proposed comprehensive standards-based systems approach and data-driven framework for collection, management, and analysis of high-quality data. This framework will inform decisions in managing clinical responses and social measures to overcome the Covid-19 global pandemic and to prepare for future public health crises. We first argue that standardized data of the type now common in global regulated clinical research is the essential fuel that will power a global system for addressing (and preventing) current and future pandemics. We then present a blueprint for a system that will put these data to use in driving a range of key decisions. In the context of this system, we describe and categorize the specific types of data the system will require for different purposes and document the standards currently in use for each of these categories in the three nations participating in this work. In so doing, we anticipate some of the challenges to harmonizing these data but also suggest opportunities for further global standardization and harmonization. While we have scaled this transnational effort to three nations, we hope to stimulate an international dialogue with a culmination of realizing such a system.

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