Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/195432
Title: Towards a European health research and innovation cloud (HRIC)
Author: Aarestrup, Frank M.
Albeyatti, Abdullah
Armitage, W. John
Auffray, Charles
Augello, Luca
Balling, Rudi
Benhabiles, Nora
Bertolini, Guido
Bjaalie, Jan G.
Black, Michaela
Blomberg, Niklas
Bogaert, Petronille
Bubak, Marian
Claerhout, Barbara
Clarke, Laura
De Meulder, Bertrand
D'Errico, Gianni
Di Meglio, Alberto
Forgo, Nikolaus
Gans-Combe, Caroline
Gray, Alexander Edward
Gut, Ivo
Gyllenberg, Alexandra
Hemmrich-Stanisak, Georg
Hjorth, Lars
Ioannidis, Yannis
Jarmalaite, Sonata
Kel, Alexander
Kherif, Ferath
Korbel, Jan O.
Larue, Catherine
Laszlo, M.
Maas, Andrew
Magalhaes, Luis
Manneh-Vangramberen, Isabelle
Morley-Fletcher, Edwin
Ohmann, Christian
Oksvold, Per
Oxtoby, Neil P.
Perseil, Isabelle
Pezoulas, Vasileios
Riess, Olaf
Riper, Heleen
Roca Torrent, Josep
Rosenstiel, Philip
Sabatier, Philippe
Sanz, Ferran
Tayeb, Monir
Thomassen, Gard
Van Bussel, Johann C.H.
Van den Bulcke, Marc
Van Oyen, Herman
Keywords: Computació en núvol
Europa
Investigació mèdica
Comunicació en medicina
Cloud computing
Europe
Medicine research
Communication in medicine
Issue Date: 19-Feb-2020
Publisher: BioMed Central
Abstract: The European Union (EU) initiative on the Digital Transformation of Health and Care (Digicare) aims to provide the conditions necessary for building a secure, flexible, and decentralized digital health infrastructure. Creating a European Health Research and Innovation Cloud (HRIC) within this environment should enable data sharing and analysis for health research across the EU, in compliance with data protection legislation while preserving the full trust of the participants. Such a HRIC should learn from and build on existing data infrastructures, integrate best practices, and focus on the concrete needs of the community in terms of technologies, governance, management, regulation, and ethics requirements. Here, we describe the vision and expected benefits of digital data sharing in health research activities and present a roadmap that fosters the opportunities while answering the challenges of implementing a HRIC. For this, we put forward five specific recommendations and action points to ensure that a European HRIC: i) is built on established standards and guidelines, providing cloud technologies through an open and decentralized infrastructure; ii) is developed and certified to the highest standards of interoperability and data security that can be trusted by all stakeholders; iii) is supported by a robust ethical and legal framework that is compliant with the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR); iv) establishes a proper environment for the training of new generations of data and medical scientists; and v) stimulates research and innovation in transnational collaborations through public and private initiatives and partnerships funded by the EU through Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-020-0713-z
It is part of: Genome Medicine, 2020, vol. 12, num. 1, p. 18
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/195432
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-020-0713-z
ISSN: 1756-994X
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Medicina)

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