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Samson Yohannes Amare
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Journal Articles
Getu Tadele Taye, Samson Yohannes Amare, Tesfit Gebremeskel G., Araya Abrha Medhanyie, Wondimu Ayele ...
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Data Intelligence (2022) 4 (4): 813–826.
Published: 01 October 2022
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View articletitled, FAIR Equivalency with Regulatory Framework for Digital Health in Ethiopia
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for article titled, FAIR Equivalency with Regulatory Framework for Digital Health in Ethiopia
This paper investigates whether or not there is a policy window for making health data ‘Findable’, ‘Accessible’ (under well-defined conditions), ‘Interoperable’ and ‘Reusable’ (FAIR) in Ethiopia. The question is answered by studying the alignment of policies for health data in Ethiopia with the FAIR Guidelines or their ‘FAIR Equivalency’. Policy documents relating to the digitalisation of health systems in Ethiopia were examined to determine their FAIR Equivalency. Although the documents are fragmented and have no overarching governing framework, it was found that they aim to make the disparate health data systems in Ethiopia interoperable and boost the discoverability and (re)usability of data for research and better decision making. Hence, the FAIR Guidelines appear to be aligned with the regulatory frameworks for ICT and digital health in Ethiopia and, under the right conditions, a policy window could open for their adoption and implementation.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Data Intelligence (2022) 4 (4): 917–937.
Published: 01 October 2022
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View articletitled, Proof of Concept and Horizons on Deployment of FAIR Data Points in the COVID-19 Pandemic
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for article titled, Proof of Concept and Horizons on Deployment of FAIR Data Points in the COVID-19 Pandemic
Rapid and effective data sharing is necessary to control disease outbreaks, such as the current coronavirus pandemic. Despite the existence of data sharing agreements, data silos, lack of interoperable data infrastructures, and different institutional jurisdictions hinder data sharing and accessibility. To overcome these challenges, the Virus Outbreak Data Network (VODAN)-Africa initiative is championing an approach in which data never leaves the institution where it was generated, but, instead, algorithms can visit the data and query multiple datasets in an automated way. To make this possible, FAIR Data Points—distributed data repositories that host machine-actionable data and metadata that adhere to the FAIR Guidelines (that data should be Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable)—have been deployed in participating institutions using a dockerised bundle of tools called VODAN in a Box (ViB). ViB is a set of multiple FAIR-enabling and open-source services with a single goal: to support the gathering of World Health Organization (WHO) electronic case report forms (eCRFs) as FAIR data in a machine-actionable way, but without exposing or transferring the data outside the facility. Following the execution of a proof of concept, ViB was deployed in Uganda and Leiden University. The proof of concept generated a first query which was implemented across two continents. A SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats) analysis of the architecture was carried out and established the changes needed for specifications and requirements for the future development of the solution.
Journal Articles
Akinyinka Tosin Akindele, Oladiran Tayo Arulogun, Getu Tadele Taye, Samson Yohannes Amare, Mirjam Van Reisen ...
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Data Intelligence (2022) 4 (4): 1013–1032.
Published: 01 October 2022
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View articletitled, The Impact of COVID-19 and FAIR Data Innovation on Distance Education in Africa
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for article titled, The Impact of COVID-19 and FAIR Data Innovation on Distance Education in Africa
Prior to the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, distance education, a mode of education that allows teaching and learning to occur beyond the walls of traditional classrooms using electronic media and online delivery practices, was not widely embraced as a credible alternative mode of delivering education, especially in Africa. In education, the pandemic, and the measures to contain it, created a need for virtual learning/teaching and showcased the potential of distance education. This article explores the potential of distance education with an emphasis on the role played by COVID-19, the technologies employed, and the benefits, as well as how data stewardship can enhance distance education. It also describes how distance education can make learning opportunities available to the less privileged, geographically displaced, dropouts, housewives, and even workers, enabling them to partake in education while being engaged in other productive aspects of life. A case study is provided on the Dutch Organisation for Internationalisation in Education (NUFFIC) Digital Innovation Skills Hub (DISH) project, which is implemented via distance education and targeted towards marginalised individuals such as refugees and displaced persons in Ethiopia, Somalia, and other conflict zones, aiming to provide them with critical and soft skills for remote work for financial remuneration. This case study shows that distance education is the way forward in education today, as it has the capability to reach millions of learners simultaneously, educating, lifting people out of poverty, and increasing productivity and yields, while ensuring that the world is a better place for future generations.
Journal Articles
Mirjam Van Reisen, Francisca Onaolapo Oladipo, Mouhamed Mpezamihigo, Ruduan Plug, Mariam Basajja ...
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Data Intelligence (2022) 4 (4): 673–697.
Published: 01 October 2022
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View articletitled, Incomplete COVID-19 Data: The Curation of Medical Health Data by the Virus Outbreak Data Network-Africa
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for article titled, Incomplete COVID-19 Data: The Curation of Medical Health Data by the Virus Outbreak Data Network-Africa
The incompleteness of patient health data is a threat to the management of COVID-19 in Africa and globally. This has become particularly clear with the recent emergence of new variants of concern. The Virus Outbreak Data Network (VODAN)-Africa has studied the curation of patient health data in selected African countries and identified that health information flows often do not involve the use of health data at the point of care, which renders data production largely meaningless to those producing it. This modus operandi leads to disfranchisement over the control of health data, which is extracted to be processed elsewhere. In response to this problem, VODAN-Africa studied whether or not a design that makes local ownership and repositing of data central to the data curation process, would have a greater chance of being adopted. The design team based their work on the legal requirements of the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR); the FAIR Guidelines on curating data as Findable, Accessible (under well-defined conditions), Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR); and national regulations applying in the context where the data is produced. The study concluded that the visiting of data curated as machine actionable and reposited in the locale where the data is produced and renders services has great potential for access to a wider variety of data. A condition of such innovation is that the innovation team is intradisciplinary, involving stakeholders and experts from all of the places where the innovation is designed, and employs a methodology of co-creation and capacity-building.