BREATHE - The Health Data Research Hub for Respiratory Health

Lead Research Organisation: University of Edinburgh
Department Name: UNLISTED

Abstract

"What is the problem?
Everyone in the UK will have a respiratory illness at some point in their life. We have the best datasets in the world – which should be used to improve respiratory health – but these are currently very difficult to find, access and use.
What do we want to do?
People in the UK deserve the best respiratory health. We want to make respiratory health better by changing the way the NHS, pharmaceutical companies, charities and researchers use data.
How will we do it?
We will create a Hub (called BREATHE) where trained, approved experts can access respiratory data to benefit patients and the public. We will make it easier for experts to use data in safe and secure ways.
How will this benefit patients?
BREATHE will support high quality research and cutting-edge innovation that will improve the lives of people living with respiratory conditions in the UK. It is important that patients and the public are involved with this project throughout, including from the very start. This is why there are patient and public members living with respiratory conditions who have worked with us on developing this proposal and who are committed to delivering BREATHE’s goals."

Technical Summary

"Approximately 12.7 million people report a history of long-standing respiratory illness and respiratory disorders are the third leading cause of death. Lung diseases account for 10% of all inpatient bed-days, cost the NHS £11billion/year and society over £70billion/year. Despite having the richest respiratory datasets in the world, data are fragmented, inconsistently structured and cumbersome to access, severely limiting their utility.
Our vision is to transform the UK’s respiratory health through creating Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) respiratory rich datasets; providing expert support to catalyse their responsible use in respiratory research and innovation. We will position the UK at the forefront of data driven innovation; creating a ‘one-stop’ service for trustworthy, multi-stakeholder utilisation of curated respiratory data for public, private and third sector benefit. Our UK-wide consortium provides the necessary expertise. Our priorities have been co-developed with patients, the public, industry and med-tech partners; together we have identified
major opportunities for early, high-profile, case studies.
BREATHE will initially focus on asthma and COPD, including respiratory infections, addressing three main themes of crucial importance to the UK life sciences sector:
1) Drug discovery and pharmacogenetics;
2) RWE to improve healthcare systems;
3) Digitally enabled trials
New data assets will be made available to the UK Health Data Research (HDR) Alliance and through the HDR Research Innovation Gateway. We will create a UK Respiratory Data Library (with metadata catalogue), curate and link data, and provide open-source algorithms to support secure analyses thereby enhancing the interoperability of datasets. This expandable platform will for example, enable the incorporation of data from wearable sensors into NHS apps to transform respiratory health, supporting rapid evaluation of new drugs and devices in real-world settings, and yielding evidence to underpin policy initiatives.
BREATHE will support stakeholders to securely use data to meet their diverse needs. We will work proactively with other Digital Innovation Hubs (DIH) to enhance the UK’s competitiveness.
"

People

ORCID iD

Publications

10 25 50
publication icon
COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative (2022) A first update on mapping the human genetic architecture of COVID-19. in Nature

 
Description All-Party Parliamentary Group for Respiratory Health - Improving Asthma Outcomes Consultation. Asthma UK Centre for Applied Research Response
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Contribution to a national consultation/review
URL https://www.ed.ac.uk/usher/breathe/latest/appg-respiratory-health-asthma-report
 
Description COALESCE Advisory Board meeting
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Implementation circular/rapid advice/letter to e.g. Ministry of Health
Impact Keen to hear outcome of current studies which analyse healthcare data at scale, from the point of view of (a) the findings and how they will guide public health policy; (b) the opportunities to improve healthcare data linkage; and (c) opportunities to link healthcare data with other non health sources (e.g. social, economic, air quality) to add to the questions we can answer and ultimate policy impact.
 
Description Contribution to Scottish Government reports on modelling of the pandemic
Geographic Reach Local/Municipal/Regional 
Policy Influence Type Citation in other policy documents
Impact This is evidence of EAVE II findings being used directly by the Director-General Health and Social Care in Scotland, in terms of spread of the disease and demands on the system e.g. in terms of healthcare
URL https://www.ed.ac.uk/usher/eave-ii/key-outputs/scottish-government-reports
 
Description Future of EAVE II and infrastructure for near real-time healthcare data access for research in Scotland
Geographic Reach Local/Municipal/Regional 
Policy Influence Type Contribution to a national consultation/review
Impact The Chief Scientist Office has continued to lead high level discussions with Scottish Government and NHS colleagues about the major benefits of using near real-time healthcare data in research beyond the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. These discussions have continued and are being prioritised despite a change in the Chief Scientist for Health during this period. The Chief Scientist Office agrees that there is a key need for ongoing health surveillance permissions and infrastructure in Scotland, to support policymaking around areas such as other infectious diseases, other health hazards, antimicrobial resistance and non-communicable diseases of major health burden, as well as to provide ongoing whole system intelligence on the Scottish health and care system.
 
Description Member of DHSC/UKRI COVID-19 College of Experts
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Membership of a guideline committee
Impact Aziz Sheikh is a member of the DHSC/UKRI COVID-19 College of Experts. The EAVE-II activities, as well as studies using this resource such as DaCVaP, QCOVID and National Core Studies, have ensured that data for the whole Scottish population are included in the UK Government's COVID-19 disease and vaccination forecasting efforts, and supported identification of individuals at particularly high risk of serious COVID-19 outcomes.
 
Description Member of Scottish Government's Silver Group for Data & Intelligence and Chair of Task Force: 3 Priority Questions
Geographic Reach Local/Municipal/Regional 
Policy Influence Type Membership of a guideline committee
Impact Professor Aziz Sheikh is a Member of Scottish Government's Silver Group for Data & Intelligence and Chair of Task Force: 3 Priority Questions. The EAVE II research has improved the Scottish Government's COVID-19 forecasting capability and supported identification of individuals at particularly high risk of serious COVID-19 outcomes.
 
Description Member of the Academy of Medical Science's Winter Scenarios Group
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Membership of a guideline committee
Impact Aziz Sheikh is a member of the Academy of Medical Science's Winter Scenarios Group. This policy related work has resulted in use of the EAVE-II national data platform for COVID-19 surveillance and the UK's main risk prediction algorithms for identifying risk factors for serious COVID-19 outcomes.
URL https://acmedsci.ac.uk/more/news/prepare-now-for-a-winter-covid-19-peak-warns-academy-of-medical-sci...
 
Description Member of the Royal Society's Data Evaluation and Learning for Viral Epidemics (DELVE) Group
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Membership of a guideline committee
Impact Aziz Sheikh is a member of the Royal Society's Data Evaluation and Learning for Viral Epidemics (DELVE) Group. This policy related work has amongst other things resulted in the use of the EAVE-II national data platform for COVID-19 surveillance and the UK's main risk prediction algorithms for identifying risk factors for serious COVID-19 outcomes.
URL https://rs-delve.github.io/
 
Description Member of the Scottish Government's Chief Medical Officer's COVID-19 Advisory Group, and its Data Task Force and Ethnicity Groups
Geographic Reach Local/Municipal/Regional 
Policy Influence Type Participation in a guidance/advisory committee
Impact Professor Aziz Sheikh is a member of the Scottish Government's Chief Medical Officer's COVID-19 Advisory Group, and its Data Task Force and Ethnicity Groups, and also serves on the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats (NERVTAG) Risk Stratification Subgroup. This policy-related work has benefited from creation of the EAVE-II national data platform for COVID-19 surveillance, and linkage to other health and research datasets, enabling the UK's main risk prediction algorithms for identifying risk factors for serious COVID-19 outcomes.
 
Description Update on COVID-19 risk groups to JCVI and CMOs
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Contribution to new or improved professional practice
Impact Our contributions to COVID-19 public health surveillance measures across Scotland/the UK have identified those at highest risk of serious COVID-19 outcomes. This work contributes directly to government guidelines and laws to protect health, public information about COVID-19, and vaccination strategies.
 
Description Applying a multidisciplinary approach to defining molecular pathways in lung function impairment
Amount £8,748,933 (GBP)
Organisation Wellcome Trust 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2022 
End 10/2030
 
Description BREATHE - The Health Data Research Hub for Respiratory Health Capital Award
Amount £400,000 (GBP)
Funding ID MC_PC_22006 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 08/2022 
End 03/2023
 
Description Core Funding National Programme Award
Amount £5,038,262 (GBP)
Funding ID HDRUK2023.0027 
Organisation Health Data Research UK 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2023 
End 03/2028
 
Description Data and Connectivity: Vaccine Pharmacovigilance
Amount £203,919 (GBP)
Funding ID HDRUK2020.146 
Organisation Health Data Research UK 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2021 
End 06/2021
 
Description Developing and validating a risk prediction model for long COVID-19
Amount £189,659 (GBP)
Organisation Chief Scientist Office 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2021 
End 02/2023
 
Description Director's Discretionary Fund
Amount £233,194 (GBP)
Funding ID TF2022.18 
Organisation Health Data Research UK 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 06/2022 
End 03/2023
 
Description EAVE II additional funding
Amount £72,327 (GBP)
Organisation Public Health Scotland 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2020 
End 09/2021
 
Description EAVE II continuation
Amount £497,577 (GBP)
Organisation Public Health Scotland 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2021 
End 09/2022
 
Description Efficient, scalable phenome-wide association studies in drug development
Amount £769,246 (GBP)
Organisation Orion Corporation 
Department ORION Pharma
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2022 
End 03/2024
 
Description NIHR-funded rapid funding call for "Data Science to inform NHS compound winter pressure policy response"
Amount £61,412 (GBP)
Funding ID HRUK2022.0323 
Organisation Health Data Research UK 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2023 
End 03/2023
 
Description National Core Studies - Longitudinal Health & Wealth
Amount £9,862,000 (GBP)
Funding ID MC_PC_20030 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2020 
End 03/2021
 
Description Phase 1 COVID-19 Immunity - National Core Study (Phase 1 IMM-NCS)
Amount £465,114 (GBP)
Organisation United Kingdom Research and Innovation 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 12/2021 
End 03/2023
 
Description Phase 1 COVID-19 Longitudinal Health and Wellbeing - National Core Study
Amount £9,000,000 (GBP)
Funding ID MC_PC_20059 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2021 
End 09/2022
 
Description Post-hospitalisation COVID-19 study (PHOSP-COVID): a national consortium to understand and improve long-term health outcomes
Amount £8,532,683 (GBP)
Organisation Department of Health (DH) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2020 
End 01/2022
 
Description QCOVID Covid Risk Stratification Tool. Development and evaluation of a tool for predicting risk of short-term adverse outcomes due to COVID-19 in the general UK population
Amount £1,285,333 (GBP)
Organisation National Institute for Health Research 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 05/2020 
End 05/2022
 
Description Rapid Outcomes of COVid therapeutics in Eave II (ROCOVE)
Amount £113,580 (GBP)
Organisation United Kingdom Research and Innovation 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2022 
End 03/2022
 
Description SME Access to Healthcare Data: AI Generated Synthetic Data
Amount £30,000 (GBP)
Organisation Innovate UK 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2022 
End 05/2022
 
Description Severe COVID-19 treated with Sotrovimab
Amount £198,000 (GBP)
Organisation GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) 
Sector Private
Country Global
Start 05/2022 
End 02/2023
 
Description SyntheticData Guidance
Amount £80,000 (GBP)
Funding ID 4050856767 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2022 
End 03/2023
 
Description UK Longitudinal Linkage Collaboration for COVID-19 research (EXCEED Study)
Amount £143,691 (GBP)
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2020 
End 05/2023
 
Description What is the uptake, safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines in: a. pregnancy; b. children and young people; c. those receiving booster doses; d. those co-administered COVID-19 and influenza vaccines?
Amount £249,775 (GBP)
Funding ID 2021.0158 
Organisation Health Data Research UK 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2021 
End 09/2022
 
Title Creation of respiratory registries in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland 
Description Curation of code and cohort profiles for COPD, ILD and asthma in primary and linked secondary care data in England (CPRD), Wales (SAIL), Scotland (DataLoch) and Northern Ireland (Honest Broker Service; not ILD yet). To be added to the Research Datasets impact tab when publication is complete and HDR UK links are completed in the next few weeks. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2023 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Algorithms and code are reproducible as a research-ready resource and an improvement in data for industry, charity, academic and NHS use. This will enable a wider range of researchers to access data and code in a way that saves time/resource and ensures consistency in analyses and reporting. 
 
Title Sharing code on github 
Description We regularly update code (https://github.com/EAVE-II). Health data for our research is stored securely but separately in Trusted Research Environments in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. By pooling the number of cases across different parts of the UK, we can create a big enough dataset to analyse rare events. Shared code facilitates common data analysis protocols across different Trusted Research Environments which means that we can perform analyses using much larger samples but without sharing actual data between research teams. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Our recent paper PLOS Medicine paper (doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003927) "First dose ChAdOx1 and BNT162b2 COVID-19 vaccinations and cerebral venous sinus thrombosis" is an example of impact from this method. There were not enough people in Scotland who had experienced CVST after a first dose of vaccine for us to analyse the data in a reliable way for this condition. By pooling the data across Scotland, England and Wales to form a sample of £11.6m people, we could create a big enough dataset to analyse possible links with vaccination, without sharing individual data between countries. We were able to show that there is a very small increased risk of CVST for people who had a first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. We did not find any link between CVST and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. 
URL https://github.com/EAVE-II
 
Title HDRUK Innovation Gateway - BREATHE Collection Page 
Description Health Data Research UK is enabling researchers to discover and request access to data via the Innovation Gateway. The Gateway does not hold or store any datasets or patient or health data but allows users to see descriptions of the different types of datasets in the UK to enable researchers to see what's available and how they can access it. A dataset is a collection of related individual pieces of data but in the case of health data, identifiable information (e.g. name or NHS number) is removed and data is de-identified where possible.If a researcher wants to access a dataset, they can send a request via the Innovation Gateway and this will be considered by the organisation that looks after that dataset. The HDRUK Innovation Gateway has created a 'collections page' for each of the 7 Hubs. BREATHE's collection page is a tool to showcase the data the Hub has access to, plus allows the Hub to make the datasets visable and facilitates a process to request access more simply. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact The BREATHE collections page will allow anyone to see what data assets are collected by BREATHE and makes them easy to find, access and use. At the time of submission, BREATHE signposts to ~90 respiratory datasets. 
URL https://web.www.healthdatagateway.org/collection/420201816349588
 
Title Work with Public Health Scotland to make data available to other researchers 
Description eDRIS has developed a COVID-19 Research Database as a direct output from the EAVE II study. This is a reduced set of key datasets and fields to support urgent COVID Research. 
Type Of Material Data handling & control 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This makes some of the EAVE II data available to a wider group of researchers, in line with Public Benefit and Privacy Panel (PBPP) approvals. 
URL https://www.isdscotland.org/Products-and-Services/eDRIS/COVID-19/index.asp
 
Description Asthma UK British Lung Foundation 
Organisation Asthma + Lung UK
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution BREATHE is able to support the Asthma UK and British Lung Foundation Partnership to understand data needs for the charity to support the questions they wish to address, in some cases to inform policy making decisions.
Collaborator Contribution Asthma UK and British Lung Foundation Partnership are a powerful voice for all respiratory diseases in the UK and BREATHE has been able to tap into the expertise within this group in an advisory capacity.
Impact Ongoing collaboration, no formal impact to report yet.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Brazil COVID-19 collaboration 
Organisation Federal University of the Recôncavo of Bahia
Country Brazil 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Analysis of Brazil COVID-19 variant data, vaccination data and occurence of symptomatic SARS-CoV-infection; comparison with Scotland
Collaborator Contribution Provision of data and analysis
Impact Contribution to public health policy in Brazil and research publications: doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(22)00451-0 doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(21)02754-9
Start Year 2021
 
Description COVID-19 in pregnancy in Scotland 
Organisation University of Edinburgh
Department MRC Centre for Reproductive Health
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Explore list of variables to extract from the NI, Scotland and Wales centres. Creating an analysis plan for pooled results.
Collaborator Contribution Share COPS methodology with the team and work with them to identify relevant variables in TREs.
Impact Analysis plan is in progress.
Start Year 2022
 
Description CPRD/SAIL 
Organisation Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency
Department Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD)
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Curation of code for COPD and ILD in primary and linked secondary care data in England and Wales.
Collaborator Contribution Provision of anonymised patient data and governance oversight / management.
Impact Project commissioned in 2022. COPD and ILD algorithms and code are to be made available as a research-ready resource and an improvement in data for industry, charity, academic and NHS use. Current status: the data are curated and a publication is in preparation. Methods will be put into cohort profiles and should be useable by mid 2023. This work provides foundations for a new HDR UK-funded Driver Programme: Inflammation & Immunity.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Can we enable harmonised, real-time, pharmacovigilance of COVID-19 vaccine(s) using routinely collected linked national data across the UK? 
Organisation Queen's University Belfast
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We led this partnership to access routine healthcare data and use common protocols to understand how safe COVID-19 vaccines are and how well they work across the UK
Collaborator Contribution Our partners looked for patterns in health records for the populations of England, Northern Ireland and Wales relating to COVID-19 vaccines, and we worked together to develop common data analysis protocols.
Impact We were the first group in the world to show using national routinely collected health data that having a first vaccine dose gives very good protection against COVID-19 hospital admission. Between 8 December 2020 and 15 February 2021, we studied over 1.3 million vaccinated people in Scotland. In a follow-on analysis, we found that between 8 December 2020 and 14 April 2021, less than one in 2000 vaccinated people in Scotland had severe COVID-19. This is despite high background levels of infection. Using common analysis protocols, we were able to coordinate a UK-wide analysis with our partners to understand how long vaccine protection lasts. At the request of one of the UK's Chief Scientific Advisers, we used data to look at side effects in the blood from the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccines. We did not find any link between the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and bleeding or blood-clotting side effects. We did find in some people given the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine a slightly increased risk of a condition known as 'idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura' (ITP) which increases the risk of bleeding disorders. In our Scottish analysis, we were not able to find a link between the COVID-19 vaccines and a very rare side effect in the brain called 'cerebral venous sinus thrombosis' (CVST). This may have been because the number we studied in Scotland was too small to find such a rare event. To address this, we repeated the analysis in England and Wales and brought results together with the Scottish data into a single analysis of 11.6 million people. We found a slightly increased risk of CVST (0.25 extra cases of clots per million people) in the 28 days after a first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. This is very, very low compared with the risk of COVID-19 hospitalisation and death in people who have not been vaccinated. We did not find any link between CVST and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. In Northern Ireland, our partners looked at vaccine uptake in people having treatment for mental health disorders. When looking at their healthcare records, it seemed that adults taking medication to aid sleep, anxiety or psychosis were less likely to be vaccinated than the general adult population. We also looked at whether healthcare staff in Wales had been vaccinated. We found that overall, a high number of staff did have their vaccines but the numbers vaccinated depended on their age and what jobs they did. We have shown that vaccines prevent or shorten COVID-19 outbreaks in care home residents in Northern Ireland. We are looking at how well and for how long vaccines protect healthcare professionals in Wales, and are currently coordinating a UK-wide analysis to understand how long vaccine protection lasts.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Can we enable harmonised, real-time, pharmacovigilance of COVID-19 vaccine(s) using routinely collected linked national data across the UK? 
Organisation Swansea University
Department Swansea University Medical School
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We led this partnership to access routine healthcare data and use common protocols to understand how safe COVID-19 vaccines are and how well they work across the UK
Collaborator Contribution Our partners looked for patterns in health records for the populations of England, Northern Ireland and Wales relating to COVID-19 vaccines, and we worked together to develop common data analysis protocols.
Impact We were the first group in the world to show using national routinely collected health data that having a first vaccine dose gives very good protection against COVID-19 hospital admission. Between 8 December 2020 and 15 February 2021, we studied over 1.3 million vaccinated people in Scotland. In a follow-on analysis, we found that between 8 December 2020 and 14 April 2021, less than one in 2000 vaccinated people in Scotland had severe COVID-19. This is despite high background levels of infection. Using common analysis protocols, we were able to coordinate a UK-wide analysis with our partners to understand how long vaccine protection lasts. At the request of one of the UK's Chief Scientific Advisers, we used data to look at side effects in the blood from the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccines. We did not find any link between the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and bleeding or blood-clotting side effects. We did find in some people given the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine a slightly increased risk of a condition known as 'idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura' (ITP) which increases the risk of bleeding disorders. In our Scottish analysis, we were not able to find a link between the COVID-19 vaccines and a very rare side effect in the brain called 'cerebral venous sinus thrombosis' (CVST). This may have been because the number we studied in Scotland was too small to find such a rare event. To address this, we repeated the analysis in England and Wales and brought results together with the Scottish data into a single analysis of 11.6 million people. We found a slightly increased risk of CVST (0.25 extra cases of clots per million people) in the 28 days after a first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. This is very, very low compared with the risk of COVID-19 hospitalisation and death in people who have not been vaccinated. We did not find any link between CVST and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. In Northern Ireland, our partners looked at vaccine uptake in people having treatment for mental health disorders. When looking at their healthcare records, it seemed that adults taking medication to aid sleep, anxiety or psychosis were less likely to be vaccinated than the general adult population. We also looked at whether healthcare staff in Wales had been vaccinated. We found that overall, a high number of staff did have their vaccines but the numbers vaccinated depended on their age and what jobs they did. We have shown that vaccines prevent or shorten COVID-19 outbreaks in care home residents in Northern Ireland. We are looking at how well and for how long vaccines protect healthcare professionals in Wales, and are currently coordinating a UK-wide analysis to understand how long vaccine protection lasts.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Can we enable harmonised, real-time, pharmacovigilance of COVID-19 vaccine(s) using routinely collected linked national data across the UK? 
Organisation University of Oxford
Department Nuffield Department of Medicine
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We led this partnership to access routine healthcare data and use common protocols to understand how safe COVID-19 vaccines are and how well they work across the UK
Collaborator Contribution Our partners looked for patterns in health records for the populations of England, Northern Ireland and Wales relating to COVID-19 vaccines, and we worked together to develop common data analysis protocols.
Impact We were the first group in the world to show using national routinely collected health data that having a first vaccine dose gives very good protection against COVID-19 hospital admission. Between 8 December 2020 and 15 February 2021, we studied over 1.3 million vaccinated people in Scotland. In a follow-on analysis, we found that between 8 December 2020 and 14 April 2021, less than one in 2000 vaccinated people in Scotland had severe COVID-19. This is despite high background levels of infection. Using common analysis protocols, we were able to coordinate a UK-wide analysis with our partners to understand how long vaccine protection lasts. At the request of one of the UK's Chief Scientific Advisers, we used data to look at side effects in the blood from the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccines. We did not find any link between the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and bleeding or blood-clotting side effects. We did find in some people given the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine a slightly increased risk of a condition known as 'idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura' (ITP) which increases the risk of bleeding disorders. In our Scottish analysis, we were not able to find a link between the COVID-19 vaccines and a very rare side effect in the brain called 'cerebral venous sinus thrombosis' (CVST). This may have been because the number we studied in Scotland was too small to find such a rare event. To address this, we repeated the analysis in England and Wales and brought results together with the Scottish data into a single analysis of 11.6 million people. We found a slightly increased risk of CVST (0.25 extra cases of clots per million people) in the 28 days after a first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. This is very, very low compared with the risk of COVID-19 hospitalisation and death in people who have not been vaccinated. We did not find any link between CVST and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. In Northern Ireland, our partners looked at vaccine uptake in people having treatment for mental health disorders. When looking at their healthcare records, it seemed that adults taking medication to aid sleep, anxiety or psychosis were less likely to be vaccinated than the general adult population. We also looked at whether healthcare staff in Wales had been vaccinated. We found that overall, a high number of staff did have their vaccines but the numbers vaccinated depended on their age and what jobs they did. We have shown that vaccines prevent or shorten COVID-19 outbreaks in care home residents in Northern Ireland. We are looking at how well and for how long vaccines protect healthcare professionals in Wales, and are currently coordinating a UK-wide analysis to understand how long vaccine protection lasts.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Collaboration with Oxford 
Organisation University of Oxford
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Project 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' was funded from the NCSi grant and led by the Univeristy of Edinburgh. The project aimed to undertake a national prospective population-based cohort using routinely collected data across Scotland, with independent replication across the UK Nations' national surveillance datasets. Descriptive analysis was carried out to build a picture of which people have post-vaccine breakthroughs. These results were evaluated in terms of people's immune response after vaccination, using data from serology where available and analysis of how long this protection lasts. Following this, the risk of experiencing vaccine breakthrough for particular groups was calculated. Also, vaccine breakthroughs in terms of viral variant, vaccine type, and number of doses were evaluated.
Collaborator Contribution Oxfird's resources accesses and analysed English data for the 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' project.
Impact 1. 'Evaluation of Risk Factors for Postbooster Omicron COVID-19 Deaths in England'. JAMA Netw Open, 2022 Sep 1;5(9):e2233446. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.33446 2. 'Severe COVID-19 outcomes after full vaccination of primary schedule and initial boosters: pooled analysis of national prospective cohort studies of 30 million individuals in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales' Lancet, 2022 15-21 October; 400(10360): 1305-1320. Published online 2022 Oct 14. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)01656-7
Start Year 2021
 
Description Collaboration with PHS 
Organisation Public Health Scotland
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Project 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' was funded from the NCSi grant and led by the Univeristy of Edinburgh. The project aimed to undertake a national prospective population-based cohort using routinely collected data across Scotland, with independent replication across the UK Nations' national surveillance datasets. Descriptive analysis was carried out to build a picture of which people have post-vaccine breakthroughs. These results were evaluated in terms of people's immune response after vaccination, using data from serology where available and analysis of how long this protection lasts. Following this, the risk of experiencing vaccine breakthrough for particular groups was calculated. Also, vaccine breakthroughs in terms of viral variant, vaccine type, and number of doses were evaluated.
Collaborator Contribution PHS's resourses provided public health input and served as a bridge to colleagues in PHS and PHE for the 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' project.
Impact 1. 'Evaluation of Risk Factors for Postbooster Omicron COVID-19 Deaths in England'. JAMA Netw Open, 2022 Sep 1;5(9):e2233446. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.33446 2. 'Severe COVID-19 outcomes after full vaccination of primary schedule and initial boosters: pooled analysis of national prospective cohort studies of 30 million individuals in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales' Lancet, 2022 15-21 October; 400(10360): 1305-1320. Published online 2022 Oct 14. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)01656-7
Start Year 2021
 
Description Collaboration with QUB 
Organisation Queen's University Belfast
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Project 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' was funded from the NCSi grant and led by the Univeristy of Edinburgh. The project aimed to undertake a national prospective population-based cohort using routinely collected data across Scotland, with independent replication across the UK Nations' national surveillance datasets. Descriptive analysis was carried out to build a picture of which people have post-vaccine breakthroughs. These results were evaluated in terms of people's immune response after vaccination, using data from serology where available and analysis of how long this protection lasts. Following this, the risk of experiencing vaccine breakthrough for particular groups was calculated. Also, vaccine breakthroughs in terms of viral variant, vaccine type, and number of doses were evaluated.
Collaborator Contribution QUB's resources accessed and analysed Norther Ireland data for the 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' project.
Impact 1. 'Evaluation of Risk Factors for Postbooster Omicron COVID-19 Deaths in England'. JAMA Netw Open, 2022 Sep 1;5(9):e2233446. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.33446 2. 'Severe COVID-19 outcomes after full vaccination of primary schedule and initial boosters: pooled analysis of national prospective cohort studies of 30 million individuals in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales' Lancet, 2022 15-21 October; 400(10360): 1305-1320. Published online 2022 Oct 14. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)01656-7
Start Year 2021
 
Description Collaboration with Strathclyde 
Organisation University of Strathclyde
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Project 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' was funded from the NCSi grant and led by the University of Edinburgh. The project aimed to undertake a national prospective population-based cohort using routinely collected data across Scotland, with independent replication across the UK Nations' national surveillance datasets. Descriptive analysis was carried out to build a picture of which people have post-vaccine breakthroughs. These results were evaluated in terms of people's immune response after vaccination, using data from serology where available and analysis of how long this protection lasts. Following this, the risk of experiencing vaccine breakthrough for particular groups was calculated. Also, vaccine breakthroughs in terms of viral variant, vaccine type, and number of doses were evaluated.
Collaborator Contribution Resource from the University of Strathclyde led the statistical analyses for the 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' project.
Impact 1. 'Evaluation of Risk Factors for Postbooster Omicron COVID-19 Deaths in England'. JAMA Netw Open, 2022 Sep 1;5(9):e2233446. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.33446 2. 'Severe COVID-19 outcomes after full vaccination of primary schedule and initial boosters: pooled analysis of national prospective cohort studies of 30 million individuals in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales' Lancet, 2022 15-21 October; 400(10360): 1305-1320. Published online 2022 Oct 14. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)01656-7
Start Year 2021
 
Description Collaboration with Swansea University 
Organisation Swansea University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Project 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' was funded from the NCSi grant and led by the University of Edinburgh. The project aimed to undertake a national prospective population-based cohort using routinely collected data across Scotland, with independent replication across the UK Nations' national surveillance datasets. Descriptive analysis was carried out to build a picture of which people have post-vaccine breakthroughs. These results were evaluated in terms of people's immune response after vaccination, using data from serology where available and analysis of how long this protection lasts. Following this, the risk of experiencing vaccine breakthrough for particular groups was calculated. Also, vaccine breakthroughs in terms of viral variant, vaccine type, and number of doses were evaluated.
Collaborator Contribution Resources from Swansea University accessed and analysed Welsh data for the 'Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-second and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level' project.
Impact 1. 'Evaluation of Risk Factors for Postbooster Omicron COVID-19 Deaths in England'. JAMA Netw Open, 2022 Sep 1;5(9):e2233446. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.33446 2. 'Severe COVID-19 outcomes after full vaccination of primary schedule and initial boosters: pooled analysis of national prospective cohort studies of 30 million individuals in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales' Lancet, 2022 15-21 October; 400(10360): 1305-1320. Published online 2022 Oct 14. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)01656-7
Start Year 2021
 
Description Cystic Fibrosis Trust 
Organisation Cystic Fibrosis Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution The partnership will aim to raise awareness of the UK CF Registry amongst new audiences, improving access and stimulating research. The Hub has contributed financially to allow the data linkage.
Collaborator Contribution The Cystic Fibrosis Trust (CFT) is working with BREATHE to link data from its national UK Cystic Fibrosis (UK CF) registry to NHS patient records. The aim of the collaboration is to establish a UK-wide linked data asset for the UK CF registry and to support the community of patients living with cystic fibrosis by stimulating research and innovation in this somewhat neglected disease area. BREATHE is working with CFT to engage patients whose data are collected as part of this registry and involve them in the future scientific direction of our collaboration.
Impact Ongoing collaboration.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Development and evaluation of a tool for predicting risk of short-term adverse outcomes due to COVID-19 in the general UK population 
Organisation University of Oxford
Department Nuffield Department of Medicine
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The EAVE II team has validated the QCovid algorithm with Scottish health data, including conceptualising the study, developing a protocol, carrying out the analysis and publishing the results.
Collaborator Contribution Researchers in our team have carried out validation
Impact QCovid was developed as a model to estimate a person's risk of being hospitalised or dying due to catching coronavirus.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Diveplane Corp. 
Organisation Diveplane Corporation
Country United States 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Access to secure Trusted Research Environment through partnership with SAIL Databank.
Collaborator Contribution A synthetic data engine will utilise respiratory data to enable the creation of accurate specific respiratory synthetic data sets. Diveplane have become a Supporting Partner to BREATHE. Diveplane will deploy the GEMINAI synthetic data engine using BREATHE respiratory data, in partnership with SAIL, to enable the creation of accurate specific respiratory synthetic data sets, without risk of exposing any confidential data.
Impact We have created and curated a synthetic version of the Welsh Asthma Observatory, which is a 10-15 year cohort of patients in Wales with asthma. This dataset should lower the governance bar for industry access, or for those who want to do modelling or training in health data.
Start Year 2021
 
Description GE Healthcare 
Organisation GE Healthcare Life Sciences
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution BREATHE is offering GE Healthcare Partners the opportunity to provide expertise in the delivery of respiratory health services, and identify opportunities where GE Healthcare Partners can service the scale-up and delivery of those services. For example through BREATHE's support in their Accelerator Programme.
Collaborator Contribution GE Healthcare Partners are significantly involved in the delivery of healthcare services in the NHS and globally. Their expertise is supporting the scale-up of Hub services to ensure its sustainability.
Impact No impact to report yet, collaboration ongoing.
Start Year 2019
 
Description GSK COVID-19 MABs 
Organisation GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)
Country Global 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution The BREATHE and EAVE II teams have obtained governance approvals for the data analysis, worked with the external industry sponsor to finalise the protocol, completed the analysis and provided a report to the sponsor.
Collaborator Contribution GSK provided the study question, sponsorship and funding. University of Strathclyde provided pharmacy input to the study protocol and governance, and data analysis / statistical expertise.
Impact A report has been provided to GSK.
Start Year 2022
 
Description GSK COVID-19 MABs 
Organisation University of Strathclyde
Department Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy & Biomedical Sciences
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The BREATHE and EAVE II teams have obtained governance approvals for the data analysis, worked with the external industry sponsor to finalise the protocol, completed the analysis and provided a report to the sponsor.
Collaborator Contribution GSK provided the study question, sponsorship and funding. University of Strathclyde provided pharmacy input to the study protocol and governance, and data analysis / statistical expertise.
Impact A report has been provided to GSK.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Novartis 
Organisation Novartis
Country Global 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Novartis is involved with two HDR Hubs which, along with other UK investments (e.g. new headquarters in White City and partnership Oxford's Big Data Institute), is indicative of their commitment to the UK Life Sciences sector. Novartis can contribute to the development of UK respiratory capabilities and gain insight in the UK offering amongst UK and Global colleagues.
Collaborator Contribution Novartis bring pharmaceutical industry expertise and perspective to the activities of the Hub, one of their representatives sits as co-chair on the BREATHE Industry Forum. Novartis can provide use case projects that highlights the benefit of the Health Data Research Hub projects and are supporting the development of the sustainability model of the Hub through identifying Hub activities that resonate with industry.
Impact Ongoing collaboration.
Start Year 2019
 
Description ONS joined as collaborator 
Organisation Office for National Statistics
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution The EAVE II team and the COVID-19 in pregnancy in Scotland (COPS) team have shared their significant work and expertise with collaborators, to extend our analyses around vaccine effectiveness UK wide.
Collaborator Contribution ONS is leading for England on research questions for follow on work looking at uptake, safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines in: (1) pregnancy; and (2) Children and Young people
Impact The work is still underway. ONS is was a partner in analyses around COVID-19 vaccination effectiveness in pregnancy, and is a partner in a current vaccine booster effectiveness study.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Oxford Royal College of General Practitioners Research and Surveillance Centre 
Organisation Royal College of General Practitioners
Department RCGP Research and Surveillance Centre
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution As a partner, the Oxford-RCGP RSC will work collaboratively with BREATHE and across the Hub network to drive the use of health data in respiratory research and innovation
Collaborator Contribution The Oxford-RCGP RSC is an internationally renowned source of information, analysis and interpretation of primary care data. Established in 1957, the RSC collects and monitors data from over 1700 general practices across England and Wales. Through its weekly upload of pseudonymised data, it is the principal primary care surveillance system across England.
Impact Collaboration ongoing
Start Year 2020
 
Description PrecisionLife 
Organisation Precisionlife
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Access to secure Trusted Research Environment through partnership with SAIL Databank. BREATHE has set up the PrecisionLife analytics to enable analysis for a genomics-related asthma severity study.
Collaborator Contribution PrecisionLife applied its unique analytics platform to help define subgroups of patients requiring different treatments and care.
Impact A new analysis environment has been established in SAIL and will be a demonstrator project for future work in this area. Initial analysis is underway.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Rapid Outcomes of COVid therapeutics in Eave II 
Organisation University of Strathclyde
Department Mathematics and Statistics Strathclyde
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We are leading this piece of work, which seeks to: 1. estimate the proportion of the population that might be eligible for MAb therapy according to current guidelines, 2. estimate the uptake of MAbs by demographics and risk group, 3. investigate the effectiveness of these treatments (alone and in combination) in real world settings, stratified by viral strain, 4. identify factors associated with severe outcomes in those treated with MAbs, 5. determine the safety profile of MAb therapies.
Collaborator Contribution Our partners at Strathclyde are providing high level statistical input and pharmacy expertise to this study.
Impact Initial analysis led to a research publication. GSK commissioned a further collaboration through BREATHE.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Respiri 
Organisation Respiri Limited
Country Australia 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Respiri are an Australia-based company. Its involvement with the BREATHE Hub highlights its interest in raising its profile in the UK and potentially scaling the use of its products to support respiratory health.
Collaborator Contribution Respiri are providing an early test project utilising its smart tools to empower people with asthma and improve outcomes. Respiri are providing insight based on data already collected to support asthma management. A representative from Respiri sits on the BREATHE Industry Forum and contributes to the Hub viability with industry.
Impact No formal impact to record yet, collaboration ongoing.
Start Year 2019
 
Description SAIL Databank 
Organisation SAIL Databank
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution BREATHE facilitates the depositing of data into the SAIL Databank to be stored in a safe trusted environment. The BREATHE Hub will encourage partners, collaborations and customers to make use of the data solutions within BREATHE and will drive the use of the respiratory data assets held.
Collaborator Contribution SAIL Databank provides a technology platform to store the data, link datasets together and allow users secure access to different views of the data. This is administered by the SAIL Databank / Secure Research Platform (SeRP) teams at Swansea University. They provide an information governance and data security model which sets out the rules under which data within the platform is held and made available to researchers. The established SAIL Databank independent Information Governance Review Panel reviews all applications to use data. They contribute their well established contractual / operational model which governs the day to day administration of the platform. And finally, data linkage services for health records for linked data projects. SAIL Databank's relationship with NHS bodies who regularly share data for research across the UK means that studies interested in accessing anonymised NHS data for research, or linking their own data to such records, can do so with the support of SAIL
Impact See publications section for full list.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Savana Med 
Organisation Savana
Department Savana, UK
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Clinical expertise and advice, access to secure research environment through partnered TRE SAIL Databank. Mechanism to validate algorithm. Access to data.
Collaborator Contribution Savana team expertise and time invested in BREATHE meetings, events and collaborative opportunities. Training of the COVID algorithms by applying NLP (natural language processing) and Machine learning to anonymised electronic health records (EHR's) from participating UK sites. Collaboration involves support for Covid-19 clinical trial. The project will engage with 20 or more NHS sites to develop a new way of accessing and 'reading' patient data. The commercial partner is contributing cash to cover each site on boarding and data management costs. The subsequent database generated by the work will become a sharable BREATHE resource.
Impact Ongoing collaboration.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Smart Respiratory Products 
Organisation Smart Respiratory Products Ltd
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution BREATHE has worked with Smart Respiratory Products (SRP) as a partner on an Innovate UK Fund (Tiny Medical Apps led grant, with SRP to provide devices for work).
Collaborator Contribution SRP are providing support via the BREATHE Industry Forum and have provided over 1-million Peak Flow readings from their devices to the SAIL database, which will shortly be available on the HDRUK Gateway.
Impact Provision of Peak Flow reading data to SAIL environment
Start Year 2020
 
Description Tiny Medical Apps 
Organisation Tiny Medical Apps
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution BREATHE has supported Tiny Medical Apps to secure funding from Innovate UK's Sustainable Innovation Fund to develop a fast, developer-friendly, secure, consent-driven, and cost-effective digital platform that aims to facilitate access to patient records across England.
Collaborator Contribution Tiny Medical Apps are providing support via the BREATHE industry forum and may provide consented patient reported data, in the future, for use in research.
Impact Funding secured for TinyMedical Apps from Innovate UK's Sustainable Innovation Fund to develop a fast, developer-friendly, secure, consent-driven, and cost-effective digital platform that aims to facilitate access to patient records across England.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Use of national linked healthcare, serology and viral genomic data to identify and characterise post-third and -booster dose vaccine breakthroughs at a population level 
Organisation University of Birmingham
Department School of Immunity and Infection
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Our primary aim is to investigate COVID infection breakthrough after third and booster vaccination and the potential influence of viral variants. This includes post-vaccine re-infection with prior history of COVID-19 illness.
Collaborator Contribution The University of Birmingham (UoB) has been awarded up to £6,674,199 on behalf of UKRI, funded as part of the COVID-19 National Core Studies (NCS), for "Phase 1 COVID-19 Immunity - National Core Study (Phase 1 IMM-NCS)" to coordinate research programmes and infrastructure to ensure key questions on immunity are being answered from basic understanding of the immune response, through duration and nature of natural infection and vaccine induced immunity in clinically at risk and general populations. By working collaboratively we draw fresh insights and increase our collective understanding of how to accelerate control of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Impact This work is at an early stage, having only began in December 2021. Our objectives are to: 1) Estimate the frequency of post-vaccine breakthroughs from linked electronic health records and viral genomic data in Scotland in near real-time. 2) Characterise the demographic, ethnic, socio-economic, immunological and clinical features of post-vaccine breakthroughs. 3) Investigate how these risks vary by vaccine dose, vaccine type, and viral variants. 4) Develop and internally validate a prediction model to assess predictors for post-vaccine breakthroughs. 5) Analyse viral variants, mutations and lineages in post-vaccine breakthroughs, and compare these to viruses in the general population over the same time interval. 6) Replicate the above findings using research-ready national linked surveillance datasets across the other UK nations.
Start Year 2021
 
Description BPNA Annual Conference 2023 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The meeting (January 2023) provided opportunities to share the latest research from diverse areas of child neurology, from lab-based basic science to clinical trials and patient experiences. Professor Sir Aziz Sheikh presented in the session on Health Informatics, on "Data-enabled responses to the COVID-19 pandemic".
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://bpna.org.uk/conference/2023/index.php?contentid=1310
 
Description Bowser Administration Delegation visit 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact The Washington DC Mayor's Office organised a visit to the University of Edinburgh by 16 companies and 4 government as part of an inward trade mission. The visit was designed to promote the UK as an investment destination for DC companies and position the UK as a strategic partner for investment, as well as to attract UK Healthcare and Life Science organisations to Washington DC. The presentations included discussion of the work done during the COVID-19 pandemic under the EAVE II platform umbrella of research projects.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Media briefing events and working extensively with journalists on their stories 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact Presentation of information about safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
 
Description National Data Assets & Opportunities for Collaboration across the UK Nations and Beyond 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact On 22 September 2022, our team delivered a webinar discussing how they have worked with near real-time healthcare data during the COVID-19 pandemic and what we have achieved and learned from this. We highlighted the importance of using patient and public voices to shape our work throughout. We presented an overview of the national data assets used (EAVE II, RCGP RSC, SAIL and the Honest Broker Service), and explained the practicalities behind how the team went about conducting pooled, UK-wide analyses. We also presented work done with international partners in Brazil looking at effectiveness and waning of the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine in children and young people. Finally, we gave some pointers about how other researchers can request access to these datasets for their own research.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.ed.ac.uk/usher/eave-ii/connected-projects/dac-vap-2/watch-our-webinar
 
Description Presentation on Health Data at a Research Insights event 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact The Research Insights series are free online public events exploring the science and research taking place in our College. Prof Sheikh and Dr Vasileiou presented about health data, how it is kept safe and secure, and how information about people's health helps to inform public health policy decisions. They explained how health data helped scientists to figure out how the effectiveness of the first doses of Covid-19 vaccine, and how health data are being used to track the Covid-19 pandemic.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Presentations to government bodies, including GO-Science, JCVI, MHRA, National Core Studies 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Presentation of data summarising safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
 
Description Presentations to inter-governmental bodies e.g. WHO 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Presentation of data summarising safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
 
Description Showcase event for the Digital Innovation Hub Programme 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact This free, one-day event led by HDR UK showcased the latest developments in technology, infrastructure and standards that are supporting trustworthy research with health data. The event connected colleagues working in the data field across healthcare, academia, charities, industry and patient groups, by showcasing the impacts of the Digital Innovation Hubs Programme. The showcase included the nine Health Data Research Hubs, the Health Data Research Innovation Gateway and the UK Health Data Research Alliance. Key themes included the importance of earning and maintaining public trust, the impacts of the Health Data Research Hubs, improvements in data discovery and opportunities to streamline access, and the benefits of collaboration and partnership. The £400K capital funding from MRC was leveraged as a direct result of the BREATHE presentation at this event.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.hdruk.ac.uk/news-opinion-events/events/building-a-legacy-for-uk-health-data-research-inf...
 
Description World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH) Forum on Health System Resilience 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Professor Sir Aziz Sheikh took part in a moderated panel discussion at WISH 2022 on how real-world data can help us to prepare better for the next pandemic. He used examples from EAVE II, BREATHE and associated projects to set the scene, and highlighted the value of data as one of the greatest assets of government. He was also co-author on a publication which was launched at the event:
El Akoum M, Dhami S, Thompson D, Sheikh A. Building health system resilience: A roadmap for navigating future pandemics. Doha, Qatar: World Innovation Summit for Health, 2022. ISBN: 978-1-913991-26-5
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://2022.wish.org.qa/