Rockefeller Foundation announces $3 million in new funding for Global.health

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The Rockefeller Foundation has announced $3 million in new funding for Global.health (G.h) - a first-of-its-kind, open-source platform for scientific pandemic data. This will enable it to expand its international partnerships and modernize the global effort around coordinated pandemic prevention, surveillance, and response.

Co-developed by researchers and engineers at the Department of Biology, University of Oxford and Boston Children's Hospital, USA, Global.health enables access to real-time, anonymized health data on infectious disease outbreaks, for the first time. The G.h database already holds over 100 million detailed, verified, harmonized, and de-identified SARS-CoV-2 case records from more than 130 countries: the most comprehensive repository of COVID-19 data in the world.

Global.health's mission is to organize the world's infectious disease data to enable more rapid responses to them. So far we have been focused on the initial phase of disease outbreaks, such as COVID-19 and monkeypox, and we will now be able to broaden our international partnerships and build our analytical tools to improve wider outbreak detection and response."

Dr. Moritz Kraemer, Co-Founder of Global.health and Associate Professor at the Department of Biology, University of Oxford

What began as a volunteer-driven data science project at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Global.health has grown into a scalable and flexible data platform that sets a new standard for open, granular, and standardized case data. This information will be a vital resource for epidemiologists and public health leaders to model and mitigate the spread of emerging infectious diseases.

In 2022, for example, Global.health's curated and validated monkeypox case dataset became one of the most comprehensive and cited resources in the crucial first 100 days of the global outbreak.

Dr Kramer added: 'This new funding from The Rockefeller Foundation will allow us to dive deeper into which data and interventions have the most impact for controlling disease outbreaks at different stages of a pandemic. These are critical steps to advancing pandemic prevention and response as the threats from climate-driven infectious diseases are increasing.'

This grant will enable Global.health to pursue priority initiatives, including:

  • Evaluating the impact of different data sources to define which data points are most useful during the early stages of an outbreak (first 100 days).
  • Developing scalable and robust open-source algorithms and data pipelines to detect and predict the emergence and geographic spread of new COVID-19 Variants of Concern (VOCs), globally.
  • Combining human mobility data with network science algorithms to optimally configure and distribute public health interventions during emerging epidemics, beyond the constraints of country or state borders.
  • Creating open-source methods and frameworks for pandemic response analyses, to make outputs directly available to groups engaged in the broader ecosystem of pandemic preparedness. This will also improve the translation of science into practical applications that are scalable and timely enough for real-world outbreak responses.
  • Cultivating collaborative working groups involving international teams of scientists, prioritizing lower- and middle-income countries, to co-develop practical applications and translate them rapidly into real-world impact. This will be achieved through targeted training, conferences, workshops, and funded collaborations, to stimulate collaborative research and development.

'We've learned a tremendous amount from COVID-19 about how to prepare for and better respond to infectious disease outbreaks - and high on the list are the importance of robust surveillance, reliable data, and rapid response,' said Chikwe Ihekweazu, Assistant Director General of the World Health Organization. 'I welcome The Rockefeller Foundation's support expanding the reach and impact of Global.health, including the ongoing collaboration with WHO's Hub for Pandemic and Epidemic Intelligence, to allow for faster data-driven decision-making at the earliest signs of an outbreak - when it matters most.'

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