Affiliation:
1. Institute of Biostructures and Bioimaging, National Research Council of Italy, Naples, Italy
2. Faculty of Industrial Engineering and Technology Management, Holon Institute of Technology, Holon, Israel
3. Faculty of Digital Medical Technologies, Holon Institute of Technology, Holon, Israel
Abstract
Abstract
Background One Digital Health (ODH) aims to propose a framework that merges One Health's and Digital Health's specific features into an innovative landscape. FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) principles consider applications and computational agents (or, in other terms, data, metadata, and infrastructures) as stakeholders with the capacity to find, access, interoperate, and reuse data with none or minimal human intervention.
Objectives This paper aims to elicit how the ODH framework is compliant with FAIR principles and metrics, providing some thinking guide to investigate and define whether adapted metrics need to be figured out for an effective ODH Intervention setup.
Methods An integrative analysis of the literature was conducted to extract instances of the need—or of the eventual already existing deployment—of FAIR principles, for each of the three layers (keys, perspectives and dimensions) of the ODH framework. The scope was to assess the extent of scatteredness in pursuing the many facets of FAIRness, descending from the lack of a unifying and balanced framework.
Results A first attempt to interpret the different technological components existing in the different layers of the ODH framework, in the light of the FAIR principles, was conducted. Although the mature and working examples of workflows for data FAIRification processes currently retrievable in the literature provided a robust ground to work on, a nonsuitable capacity to fully assess FAIR aspects for highly interconnected scenarios, which the ODH-based ones are, has emerged. Rooms for improvement are anyway possible to timely deal with all the underlying features of topics like the delivery of health care in a syndemic scenario, the digital transformation of human and animal health data, or the digital nature conservation through digital technology-based intervention.
Conclusions ODH pillars account for the availability (findability, accessibility) of human, animal, and environmental data allowing a unified understanding of complex interactions (interoperability) over time (reusability). A vision of integration between these two worlds, under the vest of ODH Interventions featuring FAIRness characteristics, toward the development of a systemic lookup of health and ecology in a digitalized way, is therefore auspicable.
Subject
Health Information Management,Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Health Informatics
Reference72 articles.
1. From “one medicine” to “one health” and systemic approaches to health and well-being;J Zinsstag;Prev Vet Med,2011
2. The One Health approach—why is it so important?;J S Mackenzie;Trop Med Infect Dis,2019
3. Risk and disaster management: from planning and expertise to smart, intelligent, and adaptive systems;A Benis;Stud Health Technol Inform,2018
4. One Digital Health: a unified framework for future health ecosystems;A Benis;J Med Internet Res,2021
5. The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship;M D Wilkinson;Sci Data,2016
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献