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Journal Article

Citation

Lee JS, Tyler ARB, Veinot TC, Yakel E. JMIR Public Health Surveill. 2024; 10: e51880.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, JMIR Publications)

DOI

10.2196/51880

PMID

38656780

Abstract

During public health crises, the significance of rapid data sharing cannot be overstated. In attempts to accelerate COVID-19 pandemic responses, discussions within society and scholarly research have focused on data sharing among health care providers, across government departments at different levels, and on an international scale. A lesser-addressed yet equally important approach to sharing data during the COVID-19 pandemic and other crises involves cross-sector collaboration between government entities and academic researchers. Specifically, this refers to dedicated projects in which a government entity shares public health data with an academic research team for data analysis to receive data insights to inform policy. In this viewpoint, we identify and outline documented data sharing challenges in the context of COVID-19 and other public health crises, as well as broader crisis scenarios encompassing natural disasters and humanitarian emergencies. We then argue that government-academic data collaborations have the potential to alleviate these challenges, which should place them at the forefront of future research attention. In particular, for researchers, data collaborations with government entities should be considered part of the social infrastructure that bolsters their research efforts toward public health crisis response. Looking ahead, we propose a shift from ad hoc, intermittent collaborations to cultivating robust and enduring partnerships. Thus, we need to move beyond viewing government-academic data interactions as 1-time sharing events. Additionally, given the scarcity of scholarly exploration in this domain, we advocate for further investigation into the real-world practices and experiences related to sharing data from government sources with researchers during public health crises.


Language: en

Keywords

*COVID-19/epidemiology; *Information Dissemination/methods; *Public Health/trends; COVID-19; crisis response; cross-sector collaboration; data infrastructures; data science; data sharing; Government; Humans; pandemic; Pandemics; public health

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