109, Part 1 | Improving Health Equity by Transforming Public Health Data Systems

Published: Dec. 13, 2023, 2:46 p.m.

b"Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, inconsistent data collection and reporting made it difficult for U.S. public health agencies to respond to the disease's inequitable impacts. Demographic and socioeconomic factors, such as age, race, ethnicity, gender, income, and disability status, were particularly challenging to capture. The same data issues would later impede agencies\\u2019 ability to prioritize vaccinations for the people most impacted by the pandemic. Even though COVID-19 is no longer a global public health emergency, the underlying data problems remain. \\n \\n\\u201cWhat\\u2019s at stake is saving lives,\\u201d says Alonzo Plough, chief science officer and vice president of research, evaluation, and learning at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), who joins us for this episode of Mathematica\\u2019s On the Evidence podcast. Plough explains, \\u201cbad data, lack of timely data, [and] lack of connected data\\u201d result in \\u201cmissing opportunities for early intervention that can save lives.\\u201d \\n \\nIn this two-part episode, Plough joins George Hobor, Javier Robles, and Anita Chandra, as they discuss the deficits of the U.S. public health data infrastructure, how these deficits affect health equity, and how public health agencies can improve their responses to public health crises by transforming their data systems.\\n\\n- Hobor is a senior program officer at RWJF.\\n- Robles is director of the Center for Disability Sports, Health, and Wellness at Rutgers University and was a member of RWJF\\u2019s National Commission to Transform Public Health Data Systems.\\n- Chandra is vice president and director of RAND Social and Economic Well-Being at the RAND Corporation.\\n\\nIn part 1, Mathematica\\u2019s Deric Joyner speaks with Plough about the motivation behind the Transforming Public Health Data Systems initiative. \\n\\nIn part 2, Mathematica\\u2019s Dave Roberts moderates a conversation between Hobor, Robles, and Chandra, about insights from the initiative and what changes need to happen next to improve the nation\\u2019s public health data infrastructure.\\n\\nPart 2 is available here: https://on.soundcloud.com/ZoipS\\n\\nTranscripts for parts 1 and 2 are available here: https://mathematica.org/blogs/improving-health-equity-by-transforming-public-health-data-systems"