Health Data Sharing to Support Better Outcomes

Building a Foundation of Stakeholder Trust

National Academy of Medicine author The Learning Health System Series author Claudia Grossmann editor Mahnoor Ahmed editor Kristin L Carman editor Maryan Zirkle editor Inez Adams editor Sameer Siddiqi editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:National Academies Press

Published:1st Sep '23

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Health Data Sharing to Support Better Outcomes cover

The effective use of data is foundational to the concept of a learning health system—one that leverages and shares data to learn from every patient experience, and feeds the results back to clinicians, patients and families, and health care executives to transform health, health care, and health equity. More than ever, the American health care system is in a position to harness new technologies and new data sources to improve individual and population health.

Learning health systems are driven by multiple stakeholders—patients, clinicians and clinical teams, health care organizations, academic institutions, government, industry, and payers. Each stakeholder group has its own sources of data, its own priorities, and its own goals and needs with respect to sharing that data. However, in America's current health system, these stakeholders operate in silos without a clear understanding of the motivations and priorities of other groups. The three stakeholder working groups that served as the authors of this Special Publication identified many cultural, ethical, regulatory, and financial barriers to greater data sharing, linkage, and use. What emerged was the foundational role of trust in achieving the full vision of a learning health system.

This Special Publication outlines a number of potentially valuable policy changes and actions that will help drive toward effective, efficient, and ethical data sharing, including more compelling and widespread communication efforts to improve awareness, understanding, and participation in data sharing. Achieving the vision of a learning health system will require eliminating the artificial boundaries that exist today among patient care, health system improvement, and research. Breaking down these barriers will require an unrelenting commitment across multiple stakeholders toward a shared goal of better, more equitable health.

We can improve together by sharing and using data in ways that produce trust and respect. Patients and families deserve nothing less.

Table of Contents
  • Front Matter
  • Executive Summary
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Vision and Strategy Background
  • 3 Statement of the Patient and Family Leaders
  • 4 Statement of the Research and Research Oversight Leaders
  • 5 Statement of the Health Care Executives
  • 6 Conclusion
  • References
  • Appendix A: June 11, 2018 - NAM Meeting Agenda and Participant List
  • Appendix B: February 7, 2019 - NAM Meeting Agenda and Participant List
  • Appendix C: August 23, 2019 - NAM Meeting Agenda and Participant List
  • <

ISBN: 9780309705097

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

134 pages