TY - JOUR
T1 - Sharing overdose data across state agencies to inform public health strategies
T2 - A case study
AU - Cherico-Hsii, Sara
AU - Bankoski, Andrea
AU - Singal, Pooja
AU - Horon, Isabelle
AU - Beane, Eric
AU - Casey, Meghan
AU - Rebbert-Franklin, Kathleen
AU - Sharfstein, Joshua
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health.
PY - 2016/3/1
Y1 - 2016/3/1
N2 - Data sharing and analysis are important components of coordinated and cost-effective public health strategies. However, legal and policy barriers have made data from different agencies difficult to share and analyze for policy development. To address a rise in overdose deaths, Maryland used an innovative and focused approach to bring together data on overdose decedents across multiple agencies. The effort was focused on developing discrete intervention points based on information yielded on decedents’ lives, such as vulnerability upon release from incarceration. Key aspects of this approach included gubernatorial leadership, a unified commitment to data sharing across agencies with memoranda of understanding, and designation of a data management team. Preliminary results have yielded valuable insights and have helped inform policy. This process of navigating legal and privacy concerns in data sharing across multiple agencies may be applied to a variety of public health problems challenging health departments across the country.
AB - Data sharing and analysis are important components of coordinated and cost-effective public health strategies. However, legal and policy barriers have made data from different agencies difficult to share and analyze for policy development. To address a rise in overdose deaths, Maryland used an innovative and focused approach to bring together data on overdose decedents across multiple agencies. The effort was focused on developing discrete intervention points based on information yielded on decedents’ lives, such as vulnerability upon release from incarceration. Key aspects of this approach included gubernatorial leadership, a unified commitment to data sharing across agencies with memoranda of understanding, and designation of a data management team. Preliminary results have yielded valuable insights and have helped inform policy. This process of navigating legal and privacy concerns in data sharing across multiple agencies may be applied to a variety of public health problems challenging health departments across the country.
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U2 - 10.1177/003335491613100209
DO - 10.1177/003335491613100209
M3 - Article
C2 - 26957660
AN - SCOPUS:84959189469
SN - 0033-3549
VL - 131
SP - 258
EP - 263
JO - Public health reports
JF - Public health reports
IS - 2
ER -