Unifying the UK’S Data for Respiratory Science: BREATHE, The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Respiratory Health Data Research Hub

Introduction The BREATHE Health Data Research Hub is a consortium of five academic institutions and several industry partners seeking to facilitate and accelerate respiratory science initiatives and outcomes. Unlocking organisational, jurisdictional, and scientific challenges, such as differing and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chris Orton, David Ford, Aziz Sheikh, John Norrie, Monica Fletcher, Jennifer Quint, Martin Tobin, Ian Hall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2020-12-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/1433
_version_ 1827610390024945664
author Chris Orton
David Ford
Aziz Sheikh
John Norrie
Monica Fletcher
Jennifer Quint
Martin Tobin
Ian Hall
author_facet Chris Orton
David Ford
Aziz Sheikh
John Norrie
Monica Fletcher
Jennifer Quint
Martin Tobin
Ian Hall
author_sort Chris Orton
collection DOAJ
description Introduction The BREATHE Health Data Research Hub is a consortium of five academic institutions and several industry partners seeking to facilitate and accelerate respiratory science initiatives and outcomes. Unlocking organisational, jurisdictional, and scientific challenges, such as differing and inherent complexities with data standards, incongruous governance, and disparate data access mechanisms for over 100 diverse UK datasets are key aims. Objectives and Approach Central to the data effort is the UK Secure eResearch Platform (SeRP UK), and its flagship tenancy, the SAIL Databank. Onboarding datasets, making them remotely available to the respiratory research community, is a key approach. Datasets targeted range from population cohort studies, to respiratory trials data, routine healthcare datasets, and specialist ‘omics data. Partnerships with national safe havens and providers such as eDRIS and NHS Digital will enable BREATHE to expedite and improve wider sharing of datasets for the respiratory science. Data improvements focus on datasets from primary, secondary, and tertiary care from national healthcare systems, ‘respiratorising’ these datasets and increasing utility for academic and industry respiratory scientists. Incorporating dataset metadata and access permutations into national cataloguing systems at HDR UK, standardising metadata, and interoperability for in-scope datasets form a concerted data quality improvement effort. Results Facilitating data sharing through initiatives such as BREATHE will increase visibility and accessibility for datasets within respiratory science, whilst addressing national cultural and governance issues to data sharing. BREATHE data sharing processes will allow for team science to be undertaken in a highly collaborative manner and allow for best practise in data collection and sharing to flow to nationwide datasets in respiratory science. Conclusion / Implications Collaborative hubs with scientific domain expertise can be created and leveraged to accelerate data sharing and data science within the scientific area. These collaborative efforts can however be translated to other disease-specific efforts, and indeed disease agnostic platform solutions.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T07:48:32Z
format Article
id doaj.art-4da33dd8b4ad4bceadda3e65e8c8b3f9
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2399-4908
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T07:48:32Z
publishDate 2020-12-01
publisher Swansea University
record_format Article
series International Journal of Population Data Science
spelling doaj.art-4da33dd8b4ad4bceadda3e65e8c8b3f92023-12-03T02:22:44ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082020-12-015510.23889/ijpds.v5i5.1433Unifying the UK’S Data for Respiratory Science: BREATHE, The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Respiratory Health Data Research HubChris Orton0David Ford1Aziz Sheikh2John Norrie3Monica Fletcher4Jennifer Quint5Martin Tobin6Ian Hall7Swansea UniversitySwansea UniversityUniversity of EdinburghUniversity of EdinburghUniversity of EdinburghImperial College LondonUniversity of LeicesterUniversity of NottinghamIntroduction The BREATHE Health Data Research Hub is a consortium of five academic institutions and several industry partners seeking to facilitate and accelerate respiratory science initiatives and outcomes. Unlocking organisational, jurisdictional, and scientific challenges, such as differing and inherent complexities with data standards, incongruous governance, and disparate data access mechanisms for over 100 diverse UK datasets are key aims. Objectives and Approach Central to the data effort is the UK Secure eResearch Platform (SeRP UK), and its flagship tenancy, the SAIL Databank. Onboarding datasets, making them remotely available to the respiratory research community, is a key approach. Datasets targeted range from population cohort studies, to respiratory trials data, routine healthcare datasets, and specialist ‘omics data. Partnerships with national safe havens and providers such as eDRIS and NHS Digital will enable BREATHE to expedite and improve wider sharing of datasets for the respiratory science. Data improvements focus on datasets from primary, secondary, and tertiary care from national healthcare systems, ‘respiratorising’ these datasets and increasing utility for academic and industry respiratory scientists. Incorporating dataset metadata and access permutations into national cataloguing systems at HDR UK, standardising metadata, and interoperability for in-scope datasets form a concerted data quality improvement effort. Results Facilitating data sharing through initiatives such as BREATHE will increase visibility and accessibility for datasets within respiratory science, whilst addressing national cultural and governance issues to data sharing. BREATHE data sharing processes will allow for team science to be undertaken in a highly collaborative manner and allow for best practise in data collection and sharing to flow to nationwide datasets in respiratory science. Conclusion / Implications Collaborative hubs with scientific domain expertise can be created and leveraged to accelerate data sharing and data science within the scientific area. These collaborative efforts can however be translated to other disease-specific efforts, and indeed disease agnostic platform solutions.https://ijpds.org/article/view/1433
spellingShingle Chris Orton
David Ford
Aziz Sheikh
John Norrie
Monica Fletcher
Jennifer Quint
Martin Tobin
Ian Hall
Unifying the UK’S Data for Respiratory Science: BREATHE, The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Respiratory Health Data Research Hub
International Journal of Population Data Science
title Unifying the UK’S Data for Respiratory Science: BREATHE, The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Respiratory Health Data Research Hub
title_full Unifying the UK’S Data for Respiratory Science: BREATHE, The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Respiratory Health Data Research Hub
title_fullStr Unifying the UK’S Data for Respiratory Science: BREATHE, The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Respiratory Health Data Research Hub
title_full_unstemmed Unifying the UK’S Data for Respiratory Science: BREATHE, The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Respiratory Health Data Research Hub
title_short Unifying the UK’S Data for Respiratory Science: BREATHE, The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Respiratory Health Data Research Hub
title_sort unifying the uk s data for respiratory science breathe the health data research uk hdr uk respiratory health data research hub
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/1433
work_keys_str_mv AT chrisorton unifyingtheuksdataforrespiratorysciencebreathethehealthdataresearchukhdrukrespiratoryhealthdataresearchhub
AT davidford unifyingtheuksdataforrespiratorysciencebreathethehealthdataresearchukhdrukrespiratoryhealthdataresearchhub
AT azizsheikh unifyingtheuksdataforrespiratorysciencebreathethehealthdataresearchukhdrukrespiratoryhealthdataresearchhub
AT johnnorrie unifyingtheuksdataforrespiratorysciencebreathethehealthdataresearchukhdrukrespiratoryhealthdataresearchhub
AT monicafletcher unifyingtheuksdataforrespiratorysciencebreathethehealthdataresearchukhdrukrespiratoryhealthdataresearchhub
AT jenniferquint unifyingtheuksdataforrespiratorysciencebreathethehealthdataresearchukhdrukrespiratoryhealthdataresearchhub
AT martintobin unifyingtheuksdataforrespiratorysciencebreathethehealthdataresearchukhdrukrespiratoryhealthdataresearchhub
AT ianhall unifyingtheuksdataforrespiratorysciencebreathethehealthdataresearchukhdrukrespiratoryhealthdataresearchhub