Data sharing considerations to maximize the use of pathogen biological and genomics resources data for public health

Nicola J Holden*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)
9 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Public sector data associated with health are a highly valuable resource with multiple potential end-users, from health practitioners, researchers, public bodies, policy makers, and industry. Data for infectious disease agents are used for epidemiological investigations, disease tracking and assessing emerging biological threats. Yet, there are challenges in collating and re-using it. Data may be derived from multiple sources, generated and collected for different purposes. While public sector data should be open access, providers from public health settings or from agriculture, food, or environment sources have sensitivity criteria to meet with ethical restrictions in how the data can be reused. Yet, sharable datasets need to describe the pathogens with sufficient contextual metadata for maximal utility, e.g. associated disease or disease potential and the pathogen source. As data comprise the physical resources of pathogen collections and potentially associated sequences, there is an added emerging technical issue of integration of omics ‘big data’. Thus, there is a need to identify suitable means to integrate and safely access diverse data for pathogens. Established genomics alliances and platforms interpret and meet the challenges in different ways depending on their own context. Nonetheless, their templates and frameworks provide a solution for adaption to pathogen datasets. Impact Statement Data sharing and accessibility for infectious disease agents under the FAIR principles have revolutionized disease tracking and epidemiology. Yet public sector data are often fragmented and restricted through privacy protections. A solution for integrated access is via Trusted Research Environments, adapting templates suggested for other types of public health data.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberlxae204
JournalJournal of Applied Microbiology
Volume135
Issue number9
Early online date7 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPrint publication - Sept 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Applied Microbiology International.

Keywords

  • biosurveillance
  • data sharing
  • fair principles
  • genomics
  • pathogens
  • safe haven
  • trusted research environment

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