The COVID-19 pandemic laid bare the gaps in our public health and health data infrastructure and illuminated the many ways in which they perpetuate vast health inequities. To work toward a modernized health data system, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation established a first-of-its-kind National Commission to Transform Public Health Data Systems to reimagine how data are collected, shared, and used, and identify the investments needed to improve health equity. Commissioners examined both the systems and the data needed to ensure public health information works for all, including: who the data we collect elevates, who is being centered in our data, who is being excluded, and why.
The Commission’s recommendations for the nation call on government at all levels, business, community-based organizations, philanthropy, and others to take specific action to reimagine and modernize the public health data system.
Commissioners developed the following overarching recommendations that offer a blueprint for change. They include recommendations on:
RWJF Commits $50 Million in Funding to Encourage Action
To accelerate progress toward reimagining and modernizing our public health data system, RWJF will award $50 million in funding for a range of projects aimed at creating a more equitable national public health data infrastructure. The funding will include:
Each of these initiatives will provide significant funding opportunities—for a broad range of community partners, researchers, and advocates—through additional requests for proposals managed by key partners in collaboration with RWJF. Additional calls for proposals will be announced in early 2022.
The Commission recommendations make it clear that in our current system, data on health inequities are divorced from the history and community conditions that shape poor health outcomes, resulting in an incomplete picture of who is most impacted and why. The COVID-19 pandemic underscores the continued and substantial need for a modernized public health data infrastructure where data are collected, analyzed, and interpreted with an eye toward equity. A modern, equity-centered public health data system helps policymakers identify problems, target interventions, and allocate resources to those who need it most.
RWJF established a first-of-its-kind National Commission to Transform Public Health Data Systems to reimagine how data are collected, shared, and used, and identify the investments needed to improve health equity. Led by Dr. Gail C. Christopher of the National Collaborative for Health Equity and supported by a research team at the RAND Corporation, the 16-member Commission represents a diverse group of innovators and experts representing multiple sectors—health care, community advocacy, government, business, public health, and others.
Experts focused on public health and health care came together to discuss transforming how public health data are collected, shared, and used; recommendations on workforce data, preparedness, and funding; and federal improvements in our national public health system.
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“A disability data justice approach is urgently needed. Public health data systems and infrastructure must be built to collect disability data and use this information to combat ableism and support equity and social justice,” writes Bonnie Swenor, member of RWJF’s Expert Panel for the National Commission to Transform Public Health Data Systems.
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