Charles-Andrew Vande Catsyne, Matilde Slot, Tamara Buble, Katrine Eriksen, Marija Svajda, Emanuel Bradasevic, Jakov Vukovic, Simon Kok Jensen, Helena Ivanković, Persephone Doupi, Christian Fynbo Christiansen, Nienke Schutte
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The European Health Data Space aims to transform health data management across the EU, supporting both primary and secondary uses of health data while ensuring trust through General Data Protection Regulation compliance. As part of the HealthData@EU Pilot, this study investigates coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) testing, vaccination, and hospitalization metrics across six European countries, with a focus on socioeconomic disparities and challenges in cross-border data access and standardization. This observational, retrospective cohort study used a federated analysis framework across Belgium, Croatia, Denmark, Finland, and France. Data were linked from administrative, social, health, and care records within each country's trusted research environment. A Common Data Model (CDM)-guided data harmonization, enabling nodes to perform independent analyses and share aggregated results. Key data processes (discovery, access, preparation, and analysis) were decentralized, with significant variability in data access procedures, security protocols, and available resources among nodes. The study revealed substantial differences in COVID-19 testing, vaccination, and hospitalization rates across countries. Denmark exhibited notably higher testing and infection rates. However, the study encountered key challenges: complex data access procedures, fragmented and incomplete socioeconomic data, and the need for extensive harmonization. Learnings from this pilot underscore the importance of streamlined, cross-country data access and standardization processes, which the European Health Data Space (EHDS) framework aims to address. The pilot demonstrates the feasibility of federated health data analysis across multiple countries while highlighting limitations in data access and interoperability. The EHDS framework offers a promising path to overcome these barriers, supporting efficient and standardized cross-border health research in the EU.
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Public Health (EJPH) is a multidisciplinary journal aimed at attracting contributions from epidemiology, health services research, health economics, social sciences, management sciences, ethics and law, environmental health sciences, and other disciplines of relevance to public health. The journal provides a forum for discussion and debate of current international public health issues, with a focus on the European Region. Bi-monthly issues contain peer-reviewed original articles, editorials, commentaries, book reviews, news, letters to the editor, announcements of events, and various other features.