Abstract Health data linkage systems are essential for understanding and addressing health inequalities, yet the United States' system—already constrained by legal and institutional limitations—has been further eroded by the second Trump administration's policies. These include defunding data collection, politicizing inequality-related research, and breaching privacy rules that protect personal data. This article draws on documentary analysis, secondary data, and comparative institutional review to document recent changes to US health data infrastructure and evaluate alternative models from France, Sweden, and England. We find that the Trump administration's actions have severely undermined the US health data linkage system, disrupting the production of data and undermining public trust. A centralized system like Sweden's offers broad data linkage capacity but may not be feasible in the US due to privacy concerns. France's tight controls on access limit usability to elite analysts, undermining inequality. England's still nascent system offers a model for equitable access to data on social, economic and political determinants of health. Rebuilding the US health data linkage infrastructure post-Trump will require restoring public trust, restoring collection of key sociodemographic indicators, and ensuring equity in access. International examples provide guidance for a more politically sustainable, inclusive system.
Lynch et al. (Wed,) studied this question.