Population Health News

“All of Us” Program Expands COVID-19, SDOH Data Available to Researchers

The All of Us Research Program has expanded its dataset to help researchers investigate long COVID, social determinants of health, and health disparities.

red, orange, yellow, green, blue and pink wooden blocks with different colored stick figures on them, scattered across a wooden table

Source: Getty Images

By Shania Kennedy

- The National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) All of Us Research Program has announced that health data from 20,000 people who have had SARS-CoV-2 is now available to researchers in the US, expanding the program’s dataset to encourage the study of long COVID, social determinants of health (SDOH), and health disparities.

The All of Us Research Program is a large-scale effort to collect and study US health data to support population health across the country. The program began national enrollment in 2018 and aims to gather data from 1 million or more Americans over the next decade. The program’s dataset contains a combination of clinical, genomic, and participant-reported information that researchers can use to study various aspects of health.

The newly expanded COVID-19 dataset currently boasts nearly 6,000 whole genome sequences and 600 shared Fitbit records from participants with a past coronavirus infection. The dataset also includes custom survey information, which allows researchers to better understand participant experiences throughout the pandemic, in addition to analyzing health outcomes from COVID-19 infection.