Hadly Clark is an associate director on the FasterCures team at Milken Institute Health. She is an experienced health care professional focused on the intersection of health and technology and leads oncology-focused initiatives exploring innovative screening technologies and anti-cancer treatments.
The United States—as of June 2020—has more reported cases of COVID-19 than any other country in the world, despite having many of the same resources as other countries that curbed the pandemic more successfully. COVID-19 has highlighted the cracks in the United States’ health-care system; specifically, it has exposed inefficiencies in the mechanisms, like data collection, through which care informs medical research.
Reflecting a widespread desire to collaborate in the fight against the virus, big tech and public-private partnerships have undertaken many initiatives to help “flatten the curve” through patient data collection. However, efforts to report data remain uncoordinated, exposing a lack of data interoperability, an inability to aggregate data from disparate sources, difficulties with analyzing data in real time, and a crisis of consumer trust in big tech.
This paper explores these challenges in relation to medical research and discusses how the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted their importance. It also provides recommendations across several key thematic areas, including promoting the interoperability and integration of data, ensuring data privacy and protections, and advancing remote patient monitoring and telehealth.
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The rapid advancement of the health technology landscape relies heavily on patient data. Patient data from medical records and digital health apps can be leveraged to build new tools that can help diagnose disease, remotely monitor and...
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in the proliferation of new data that have created unprecedented opportunities to establish early warning systems for pandemics. These systems not only have capabilities to predict and detect pathogens that...
Submitted electronically Monica Jackson Office of the Executive Secretary Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 1700 G Street, NW Washington, DC 20552 Dear Ms. Monica Jackson, The Milken Institute Center for Financial Markets would like to...
Through significant advancements in biomedical innovation, new promising gene and cell therapy treatments may be the key to unlocking the cure to debilitating genetic, oncologic, and other diseases that were once deemed incurable. The first...