Friday, August 23, 2013

Big Data = Bigger Health Inequality?



We’ve already established that big data is a game changer. This is as true for business as it is for our daily living – including our individual and public health.

Big data is already being used in health research, preventative health care, treatment and therapy. For example, new websites are popping up that allow patients to track their symptoms and outcomes in real time. This allows others in similar medical situations to analyze the individual and aggregate outcomes to help make their medical decisions. Some of these websites, like patients like me, even show an expected outcome for your case for each potential intervention based on the available data on the website (watch the website creator explain it here). A January 2013 McKinsey report entitled “The “big-data” revolution in health care” describes the impact of big data and how it is helping and can continue to help lead to right living, right care, right provider, right value and right innovation.  

The May 2011 McKinsey report Big data: The next frontier for innovation, competition, and productivity estimates that “big data can enable more than $300 billion a year in value creation in US health care”. As exciting as the potential of big data is on public health, I can’t help but ask if big data represents the next big thing in health inequality?

It has been long established that health is strongly correlated with socioeconomic status (just check out gapminder if you aren’t convinced). Low and middle-income countries bear a disproportionate mortality and morbidity burden. In addition, within a country, poor, vulnerable and marginalized groups have inferior health and health outcomes.

Traditionally, these are the groups who receive the lowest level of health care coverage and fewest research dollars – currently less than 10 percent of medical research is devoted to diseases that account for more than 90 percent of the global burden of disease. Unfortunately, they are also the groups who generate the least data and, consequently, where big data will have the least impact.

If big data is going to revolutionize our world as quickly and as profoundly as predicted, and if “primary data pools are at the heart of big-data revolution in healthcare” (McKinsey, 2013 report), it is these already underserved and overburdened groups who will benefit the least. This risks creating an even greater health inequality.

What’s the solution? We need to work to generate a robust data reserve for underserved groups and start using it. Here are some simple steps that we can take to get there:

Go digital: Many of the information systems used in global public health don’t give us big data because they don’t use digital data collection. Many large and resource intensive sociodemographic and epidemiological surveys are still conducted using paper and are never fully entered into a digital format. New technologies and tools should make these collection methods a thing of the past. Joel Selanik explains the problem and presents one great solution in his TED talk (here).

Ask for help…from non-experts: a research team from the Harvard School of Public Health used 1,000 non-scientific volunteers to analyze an enormous data set of tuberculosis bacterium growth videos. The team of volunteers was able to analyze the information in two days, which would have normally taken the research team three months. We need to start unleash the power of crowd sourcing solutions.

Open your mind to open data: The culture of traditional research has created incentives for groups to protect their data. This has to be a way of the past. Key players like the United Nations, including the World Health Organization, have already made their data sets public. All organizations, countries and researchers should follow suit and allow the public access to non-personal health information so that evidence based public health can be crowed sourced for all diseases across various contexts.

                                          Paper Data Collection on Health in Rural India



12 comments:

  1. This is really interesting Nat. I hadn't thought about big data and health. Very thought-provoking. Thank you!

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    1. Thanks for the comment Hannah. I also hadn't thought too much about the implications on big data and public health. Have you seen it used at all in your public health strategy and policy work?

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  2. Big data is also big business, even in developing countries where massive investments in health management information systems and donor supported surveys cost billions per year.

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  3. Thanks for the comment Paul. Have you seen it used in practice yet in Mozambique? (or any other places)? I was trying to think of examples from my public health experience where I have seen data mining in programs but don't think that I have come across anything in person yet.

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  4. Interesting post! It makes one wonder about the consequences of big data on patient confidentiality. What are the risks?

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    1. I wondered the same thing. I have the feeling that digital is inevitable and it's going to be about finding the right privacy protection strategies and digital information balance. There is lots to read about patient privacy and digital files - the NHS recently commissioned a report on it and there is a commentary here: http://digitalchallenge.dh.gov.uk/2013/04/26/caldicott/.

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  5. I have read the blog and in particular see the utility of digital data in resource scarce communities. In our child health project in south western Uganda we used basic cellphones so that the community health volunteers could input the data about under -five year old children with respect to symptoms possibly related to malaria, diarrhea and/or acute respiratory infections . Cellphone entry was mastered by volunteers, some of whom had not used a cellphone previously. Digital data provides a way to collect data that may lead to optimal public health strategies and improved health outcomes in communities.

    The data sets from our communities using cellphones, compared to the communities in which volunteers had to use paper and pen, were more complete, accurate and timely. Digital data provides huge potential.

    Jan (Vancouver, BC)

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  6. There are some amazing cases of mobile-based health care solutions being implemented in developing economies like Africa and India. With easier access to data mining capability I am certain these regions are poised to leapfrog the rest of us in-terms of health care analytics.

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  7. You might like this article http://www.impatientoptimists.org/Posts/2013/09/The-Big-Data-Influence

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    1. Thanks Kiron for the interesting article. Gates Foundation is a great example of maximizing technology in development. There is also a great talk from Melinda Gates on what NGOs can learn from Coca-Cola including real time data Melinda and Coca Cola. My former company, the Global Fund, recently entered a partnership with Coca Cola to help us improve our supply chain management Global Fund and Coca Cola Partnership

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  8. If you are interested in reading up on big data and health care in high income countries, check out this great blog: Big Data and Health Care

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