Pan-Canadian Health Data Charter Principle 6 envisions health data that are timely, accessible, meaningful, and comprehensive. This paper examines three dimensions of this principle: what is envisioned for health data, for whom, and for what purposes. Comprehensive data include publicly funded care, privately paid services, patient-reported outcomes, and social determinants. To be meaningful, data require standardization and quality assurance. Timely access ranges from real-time clinical use to dependable research access. Accessibility depends on interoperable systems and secure environments. Current practices fall short across all dimensions, with fragmented, incomplete, and delayed data limiting timely access and effective use. Access and coverage remain uneven, reflecting structural and policy barriers. Despite these challenges, there are promising initiatives such as efforts to enhance national data stewardship. Advancing Principle 6 will require involvement of all interests in health data, including data stewards, policy-makers, providers, data users, and members of the public.
McGrail et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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