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      Big Data Science: Opportunities and Challenges to Address Minority Health and Health Disparities in the 21st Century

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          Abstract

          Addressing minority health and health disparities has been a missing piece of the puzzle in Big Data science. This article focuses on three priority opportunities that Big Data science may offer to the reduction of health and health care disparities. One opportunity is to incorporate standardized information on demographic and social determinants in electronic health records in order to target ways to improve quality of care for the most disadvantaged populations over time. A second opportunity is to enhance public health surveillance by linking geographical variables and social determinants of health for geographically defined populations to clinical data and health outcomes. Third and most importantly, Big Data science may lead to a better understanding of the etiology of health disparities and understanding of minority health in order to guide intervention development. However, the promise of Big Data needs to be considered in light of significant challenges that threaten to widen health disparities. Care must be taken to incorporate diverse populations to realize the potential benefits. Specific recommendations include investing in data collection on small sample populations, building a diverse workforce pipeline for data science, actively seeking to reduce digital divides, developing novel ways to assure digital data privacy for small populations, and promoting widespread data sharing to benefit under-resourced minority-serving institutions and minority researchers. With deliberate efforts, Big Data presents a dramatic opportunity for reducing health disparities but without active engagement, it risks further widening them.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ethn Dis
          Ethn Dis
          Ethn Dis
          Ethn Dis
          Ethnicity & Disease
          International Society on Hypertension in Blacks
          1049-510X
          1945-0826
          20 April 2017
          Spring 2017
          : 27
          : 2 , Big Data and Its Application in Health Disparities Research, Spring 2017
          : 95-106
          Affiliations
          [1]Office of the Director, National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institutes of Health (NIH)
          [2]Office of the Director, NIH
          [3]National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, NIH
          [4]Department of Medicine, UCLA Medical Center
          [5]National Cancer Institute, NIH
          [6]National Library of Medicine, NIH
          [7]College of Literature, Science and the Arts, University of Michigan
          [8]Department of Geography and GeoInformation Science, College of Science, George Mason University
          [9]Departments of Biomedical Informatics and Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
          Author notes
          Address correspondence to Xinzhi Zhang, MD, PhD; Program Director; Division of Extramural Scientific Programs (DESP); NIMHD, NIH; 6707 Democracy Boulevard, Suite 800; Bethesda, Maryland 20892-5465. 301.594.6136; xinzhi.zhang@nih.gov

          Competing Interests: None declared.

          Research concept and design: Zhang, Pérez-Stable, Bourne, Berrigan, Wood, Jackson, Wong, Denny; Acquisition of data: Zhang, Pérez-Stable, Berrigan; Data analysis and interpretation: Zhang, Pérez-Stable, Peprah, Duru, Breen, Berrigan; Manuscript draft: Zhang, Pérez-Stable, Bourne, Peprah, Duru, Breen, Berrigan, Wood, Jackson, Wong, Denny; Statistical expertise: Zhang, Breen, Wong; Acquisition of funding: Pérez-Stable; Administrative: Zhang, Bourne, Peprah, Duru, Berrigan, Wood, Jackson, Wong; Supervision: Pérez-Stable, Denny

          Article
          PMC5398183 PMC5398183 5398183 ed.27.2.95
          10.18865/ed.27.2.95
          5398183
          28439179
          f80d055a-4b4f-4769-89a5-a71e3352687a
          Copyright © 2017, International Society on Hypertension in Blacks.
          History
          Categories
          Original Report: Big Data and Its Application in Health Disparities Research

          Health Disparities,Health Inequities,Big Data
          Health Disparities, Health Inequities, Big Data

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