Abstract

Knowledge gained from observational cohort studies has dramatically advanced the prevention and treatment of diseases. Many of these cohorts, however, are small, lack diversity, or do not provide comprehensive phenotype data. The All of Us Research Program plans to enroll a diverse group of at least 1 million persons in the United States in order to accelerate biomedical research and improve health. The program aims to make the research results accessible to participants, and it is developing new approaches to generate, access, and make data broadly available to approved researchers. All of Us opened for enrollment in May 2018 and currently enrolls participants 18 years of age or older from a network of more than 340 recruitment sites. Elements of the program protocol include health questionnaires, electronic health records (EHRs), physical measurements, the use of digital health technology, and the collection and analysis of biospecimens. As of July 2019, more than 175,000 participants had contributed biospecimens. More than 80% of these participants are from groups that have been historically underrepresented in biomedical research. EHR data on more than 112,000 participants from 34 sites have been collected. The All of Us data repository should permit researchers to take into account individual differences in lifestyle, socioeconomic factors, environment, and biologic characteristics in order to advance precision diagnosis, prevention, and treatment.

Keywords

Observational studyDiversity (politics)Health equityMedical educationProtocol (science)Socioeconomic statusHealth recordsResearch programMedicineData collectionGerontologyData scienceFamily medicinePsychologyAlternative medicineHealth careEnvironmental healthComputer sciencePublic healthPopulationNursingPolitical science

MeSH Terms

Biological Specimen BanksBiomedical ResearchCohort StudiesDatasets as TopicElectronic Health RecordsHealth SurveysHumansObservational Studies as TopicPrecision MedicineResearch DesignUnited States

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2019
Type
article
Volume
381
Issue
7
Pages
668-676
Citations
1999
Access
Closed

Social Impact

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1999
OpenAlex
56
Influential
1879
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Cite This

Joshua C. Denny, Joni L. Rutter, David B. Goldstein et al. (2019). The “All of Us” Research Program. New England Journal of Medicine , 381 (7) , 668-676. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmsr1809937

Identifiers

DOI
10.1056/nejmsr1809937
PMID
31412182
PMCID
PMC8291101

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%