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Data-driven digital health technologies have the power to transform health care. If these tools could be sustainably delivered at scale, they might have the potential to provide everyone, everywhere, with equitable access to expert-level care, narrowing the global health and wellbeing gap. Conversely, it is highly possible that these transformative technologies could exacerbate existing health-care inequalities instead. In this Viewpoint, we describe the problem of health data poverty: the inability for individuals, groups, or populations to benefit from a discovery or innovation due to a scarcity of data that are adequately representative. We assert that health data poverty is a threat to global health that could prevent the benefits of data-driven digital health technologies from being more widely realised and might even lead to them causing harm. We argue that the time to act is now to avoid creating a digital health divide that exacerbates existing health-care inequalities and to ensure that no one is left behind in the digital era.
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Ibrahim et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a082444113ba5b476ddfc4e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s2589-7500(20)30317-4
Hussein Ibrahim
University of Babylon
Xiaoxuan Liu
University of Science and Technology Liaoning
Névine Zariffa
Alliance for Decision Education
The Lancet Digital Health
University College London
University of Birmingham
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
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