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. 2014 Jun 1;4(2):15.

Table 1.

PESTL Analysis of the RWD Landscape in Europe

Area Drivers Enablers Barriers Alternatives
Policy

European Commission (EC)'s push for the development of eHealth infrastructures and use of EHR

EC's drive for the creation of Pan- European datasets and improved interoperability

National healthcare reforms aiming to greater efficiency in service management and provision.

EU funding instruments

Regional and National data infrastructure.

EC's data protection regulation

Fragmentation of national approaches to health reform

Disparities between national eHealth systems

Governance issues regarding the design and implementation of RWD standards.

Reliance on data collected in countries with easiest rules for access

Involvement in EU-funded research projects in partnership with relevant public and private stakeholders.

Economic

Resources constraints and need to develop efficient pathways to analysis

Incentives for collaboration to pool resources

Development of a market for data.

New synergies within the data value chain (e.g., with insurance companies)

National authorities encouraging data input.

Fragmented markets presenting different characteristics

Issues surrounding cost sharing for data access and use

Conflicts of interest.

Routine collection of publicly available data

Funding to academia for research in databases

Participation in research-minded consortia to spread the cost of data access and analysis

Engagement in disease specific research projects with direct access to self-reported patient data.

Social

Increased familiarity with sharing data

Increased attention to the burden of a chronically ill and ageing society

Enthusiasm for new cures for illnesses

Willingness to access personalised health services.

Positive media coverage

Interaction with stakeholders (e.g., rare disease groups)

Practitioners care about improving outcomes for patients.

Increased suspicions about data use and potential breaches

Privacy risks due to linking different datasets

Regulation surrounding consent management

Image problem of pharmaceutical companies or insurers.

Development of personalised and stratified health services offer

Communication around the positive effects of RWD-based research.

Technological

Increased technological capabilities for data storage and analysis

Increasing capacity to link distinct datasets

Push towards standardisation of terminologies.

Machine learning, including natural language processing

National/patient identifier systems

Social media and apps for self-reported data collection.

Limits of analytical capabilities for the treatment of data

Inconsistency of existing databases and limited development of data quality insurance standards.

Leveraging methods and tools developed in other sectors

Exploration of the potential of apps/partnerships with device manufacturers.

Legal EU level and national level debate on data protection, use and access.

Potential of using RWD to improve health services efficiency might influence existing regulation to facilitate data access

Technological advances reduce the burden of work for consent documentation collection.

Privacy and data protection likely to be strengthened

Ethical standards for research

Fragmented standards for access to databases.

Efforts on transparency and ethical commitments

Publication of RWD-based research results.