Summary

Published Date: January 11, 2024

Summary: Making data accessible to communities is essential for developing community-driven solutions to address health inequities. In this analytic essay, authors highlight the importance of democratizing data for Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders (NHPIs) — diverse populations that historically have had little access to their data — in the context of achieving equity in health and the social drivers of health.

Authors provide a framework for evaluating community accessibility of data, which includes concepts of data availability, salience, cost, and report back. Researchers apply the framework to evaluate community accessibility of NHPI data from 29 federal data sources. Results from a survey of NHPI-serving community organizations in California conducted from December 2021 to February 2022 to assess community data needs are provided.

Findings: Findings reveal federal gaps in data accessibility, as well as NHPI community organizational needs for increased data accessibility, data saliency, and technical capacity. Furthermore, organization leads expressed concerns about data privacy, security, and misuse. Authors provide recommendations for data custodians to improve accessibility of timely, accurate, and robust data to support NHPI communities.

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