2023
DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010157
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What constitutes equitable data sharing in global health research? A scoping review of the literature on low-income and middle-income country stakeholders’ perspectives

Abstract: IntroductionDespite growing consensus on the need for equitable data sharing, there has been very limited discussion about what this should entail in practice. As a matter of procedural fairness and epistemic justice, the perspectives of low-income and middle-income country (LMIC) stakeholders must inform concepts of equitable health research data sharing. This paper investigates published perspectives in relation to how equitable data sharing in global health research should be understood.MethodsWe undertook … Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…One interviewee, in particular, emphasised the importance of regulation to foster meaningful knowledge co-creation, whereby local African researchers are equally involved in research collaborations and fairly acknowledged in resulting outputs. This finding concurs with other studies suggesting that most LMICs lack robust regulatory and governance structures [ 17 , 52 55 ]. Such insufficiencies in catering to the lawful and safe sharing or cross-border transferring of data caused some interviewees to experience first-hand consequences of neo-colonial science, also known as helicopter research, through exploitative research practices.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
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“…One interviewee, in particular, emphasised the importance of regulation to foster meaningful knowledge co-creation, whereby local African researchers are equally involved in research collaborations and fairly acknowledged in resulting outputs. This finding concurs with other studies suggesting that most LMICs lack robust regulatory and governance structures [ 17 , 52 55 ]. Such insufficiencies in catering to the lawful and safe sharing or cross-border transferring of data caused some interviewees to experience first-hand consequences of neo-colonial science, also known as helicopter research, through exploitative research practices.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Data sharing is an important part of open science as more institutions, journals, health research funders and governments emphasise the importance of open science and enforce open data policies intended to increase academic influences and promote scientific discovery and development for the greater benefit of the public [ 10 , 25 27 ]. Openness in science contributes to greater social impact on the public and our interviewees recognised its several benefits which are consistent with previous research [ 17 , 28 30 ]. These benefits encompassed the potential for collaborative endeavours, the capacity to conserve resources, the advancement of knowledge and the increased robustness of study findings which could all potentially inform policy and decision-making [ 17 , 28 30 ].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
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