key: cord-0784621-kf23ii03 authors: Curioso, Walter H; Carrasco-Escobar, Gabriel title: Collaboration in times of COVID-19: the urgent need for open-data sharing in Latin America date: 2020-07-12 journal: BMJ Health Care Inform DOI: 10.1136/bmjhci-2020-100159 sha: 508510df97407679e196a98299564573e85a034f doc_id: 784621 cord_uid: kf23ii03 nan The pandemic of COVID-19 has shown that the information disseminated through peerreviewed journals and accompanying online data sets is vital for decision-makers. However, we are currently seeing several deficiencies in open-data sharing mechanisms globally, and in particular Latin American countries, and therefore, this highlights the need for open access to data. Latin American and Caribbean countries have remarkable initiatives to publish 'open-access' science through the Scientific Electronic Library On-line (SciELO), 1 comprising a network of 16 national openaccess journal collections and included more than 1350 active titles. The SciELO collections publish the best journals from the most research-productive countries from Latin America and the Caribbean region. Moreover, the 'LA Referencia' 2 is a Latin American network of 10 countries whose open-access repositories share interoperability standards with the objective to share and give visibility to the scientific production of higher education institutions and scientific research in Latin America. This initiative provides access to more than one million scientific articles, 800 000 graduate theses and more than 57 000 reports from more than 210 universities and institutions in Latin America. The COVID-19 response requires an integrative, collaborative and managing realtime deidentified data and information to produce the best decision-making. 3 Following the interoperable collaboration model for sharing journals, thesis and reports in Latin America, we urgently need interoperable, open-data repositories. 4 We still need to solve the technological, policy/legal, financial/ economical, organisational and sociocultural challenges that limit the open access to data and open government data initiatives, 5 including the cultural resistance of sharing data as is still observed in Peru and other countries in Latin America. While there are some efforts of global data repositories 6 and recent initiatives to open individual-level data such in Mexico, Colombia and Peru, 7 there is still a lack in demographics and operational information, such as number and types of tests (molecular and/or antibodies), hospital beds, intensive care units, case definitions and so on. Even more critical, within each country, the availability of information regarding the aforementioned variables and population composition is highly heterogeneous between urban and rural areas, increasing the uncertainty and hampering the timely response required during this pandemic. Local, regional and national governments play a key role in this pandemic, and we need to integrate efforts from academia, civil society and the private sector. 8 The lack of funding to strengthen health information systems and information interoperability, 9 and bureaucratic barriers to exchange information, move towards open data will be essential to face this pandemic, contributing to better transparency, reproducibility of results and evidence-based decision-making. Twitter Walter H Curioso @waltercurioso and Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar @gabc91 Contributors WHC and GC-E: conceptualisation, methodology, investigation, resources, writing-original draft preparation, writingreview and editing. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript. Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors. Competing interests None declared. Patient consent for publication Not required. Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed. Open access This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http:// creativecommons. org/ licenses/ by-nc/ 4. 0/. Walter H Curioso http:// orcid. org/ 0000-0003-3789-7483 Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar http:// orcid. org/ 0000-0002-6945-0419 A systematic scoping review of the domains and innovations in secondary uses of digitised health-related data Using ontologies to improve semantic interoperability in health data A systematic review of open government data initiatives An interactive web-based dashboard to track COVID-19 in real time COVID-19 data sources in Latin America and the Caribbean In this issue -Don't make assumptions about integrated systems, data quality, utilisation of technology, or access to routine data Understanding the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic through data