| Literature DB >> 35060917 |
Camille Masselot1, Bastian Greshake Tzovaras2, Chris L B Graham1, Gary Finnegan3, Rathin Jeyaram2, Isabelle Vitali4, Thomas Landrain1, Marc Santolini1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rise of major complex public health problems, such as vaccination hesitancy and access to vaccination, requires innovative, open, and transdisciplinary approaches. Yet, institutional silos and lack of participation on the part of nonacademic citizens in the design of solutions hamper efforts to meet these challenges. Against this background, new solutions have been explored, with participatory research, citizen science, hackathons, and challenge-based approaches being applied in the context of public health.Entities:
Keywords: access; collective intelligence; design; framework; immunization; implementation; innovation; open innovation; open science; participatory; programmatic research; public health; vaccination access; vaccine; vaccine hesitancy; web based
Year: 2022 PMID: 35060917 PMCID: PMC8817221 DOI: 10.2196/32125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Particip Med ISSN: 2152-7202
Figure 1Overview of the Just One Giant Lab (JOGL) platform. The image on the left is a screenshot of the JOGL platform. The right-hand image is a heatmap of feature presence across popular online tools. For each platform (columns), we numerically encoded the presence (1) or absence (0) of each feature (rows). Then, for each element, we computed a Z score by standardizing values across platforms, represented here by the color spectrum: blue (low) to red (high). CBPP: citizen-based peer production network (ie, citizen science platform); CV: curriculum vitae; Je-S: Joint Electronic Submissions; MNI: Montreal Neurological Institute; OSF: Open Science Framework; RSB: Royal Society of Biology.
Figure 2Workflow of the Co-Immune program design. JOGL: Just One Giant Lab.
Figure 3Treemap representing the domains of action of the 13 Co-Immune partners.
Co-Immune events.
| Name | Mode; type; location | Duration (hours), n | Objective | Design; supporting partners (if applicable) | Participants, n |
| Launch | Offline; ceremony; CRIa, Paris | 3 | Gather the initial community | Presentation of the program design, features, timeline, and partners, as well as networking | 60 |
| OpenJOGLb; Co-Immune | Online | 1 | Q&Ac session on the program | Presentation of Co-Immune and questions and answers | 3 |
| Sprint; open data | Offline; hackathon; CRI, Paris | 2.5 | Build community, create projects, and create data repositories | Statement of the problem (videos of experts), team formation and effort, mentoring, and publication of results on the JOGL platform; supported by CRI and CorrelAid | 25 |
| OpenJOGL; Vaccination Awareness Escape Game [ | Online | 1 | Foster collaboration around single projects | Pitch of the project and its needs, feedback from experts, and questions and answers | 7 |
| Sprint; project creation | Offline; hackathon; CRI, Paris | 4 | Build community and create multidisciplinary projects | Statement of the problem (videos of experts), ice breaker, multidisciplinary team formation and effort, mentoring, presentation of results, vote for the most promising projects, publication of results on the JOGL platform, and networking; supported by CRI, Epitech, Wild Code School, CorrelAid, and Excelya | 22 |
| Sprint; open data | Offline; hackathon; Wild Code School, Paris | 3 | Accelerate the development of projects related to data science | Selection of a project by participants among the two choices available, team formation and effort, mentoring, presentation of results, publication on the JOGL platform, and networking; supported by Wild Code School, CorrelAid, and Excelya | 15 |
| Sprint; open data | Offline; hackathon; Epitech, Paris | 3 | Build the community, create projects, and accelerate the development of one project using Twitter data | Statement of the problem, selection of a project by participants among the four choices available (including one already existing project), team formation and effort, mentoring, presentation of results, vote for the most promising project, publication of results on the JOGL platform, and networking; supported by Epitech, Kap Code, Excelya, and CorrelAid | 35 |
| OpenJOGL; HERAd: A Health Platform for Refugees [ | Online | 1 | Foster collaboration around single projects | Pitch of the project and its needs, feedback from experts, and questions and answers | 7 |
| OpenJOGL; better documentation for better collaboration | Online | 1 | Help teams document their projects in the most open and reproducible way | Expert presentation on best practices for documenting open science projects, presentation of Co-Immune expectations for documentation, and questions and answers | 13 |
| Closing ceremony | Offline; ceremony; CRI, Paris | 2 | Close the Co-Immune program | Presentation of the main outputs of the program and awards for the best projects | 70 |
aCRI: Center for Research and Interdisciplinarity.
bJOGL: Just One Giant Lab.
cQ&A: question and answer.
dHERA: Health Recording App.
Figure 4Treemap of the 31 Co-Immune experts: domains of expertise (left) and affiliations (right).
Figure 5Growth of the number of participants (left) and number of projects (right) over the life span of the program. Dashed bars show when events for community facilitation where held (green: offline events; blue: online events; red: kickoff meeting). Blue lines give a linear fit during the corresponding periods, showing stable growth pre- and postkickoff.
Figure 6An overview over the Co-Immune community: participant categories (left) and the 20 most represented skills (right) in the Co-Immune community.
Figure 7Skill map of the Co-Immune community. Skills are linked if they appear in the profile of the same participant. Link weight indicates the number of participants sharing the skills. Node size indicates weighted degree.
Co-Immune project descriptions.
| Project name | Project status | Solution category | Summary description |
| HERAa: A Health Platform for Refugees [ |
Assessedb Awarded Grand prize Best approach prize Best impact strategy prize |
Software Knowledge transfer | A mobile health app designed for improving the monitoring of vaccination and perinatal health of Syrian refugees in Turkey; it provides recall of vaccines, storage of health data, health promotion (educational content), and financial incentives for immunization |
| Qualitative Analysis of Tweets on Vaccination [ |
Assessed Awarded Partner prize |
Software Knowledge production | A web-based platform providing real-time visualization and analysis of tweets related to vaccination and vaccination hesitancy; data analysis included sentiment analysis and network analysis; an area of development was the development of predictive models of epidemic occurrence based on Twitter data |
| Commit to Get Vacc & to Promote Vaccination – HEROIC Santé [ |
Assessed Awarded Best implementation strategy prize |
Intervention Knowledge transfer | A short questionnaire (7 minutes) using engagement approaches from the human and social sciences, such as “the importance of the source,” “voluntary consent,” or “fear and danger management,” to engage health care professionals and users, not only to be vaccinated against the flu, but also to promote flu vaccination |
| Project APRICOTc [ |
Assessed Awarded Partner prize |
Hardware | Development of a synthetic biology–based methodology that addresses the evasion mechanisms adopted by the mycobacterium tuberculosis and induces the acceleration of lysosomal biogenesis to improve antigen presentation |
| Vaccination Awareness Escape Game [ |
Assessed Not awarded |
Intervention Knowledge transfer | An escape game to raise vaccination awareness among the general population |
| Harmonize Vaccination [ |
Assessed Not awarded |
Software Knowledge production | A tool for parsing various formats of vaccination coverage data sets and for visualizing them on a common platform |
| Pass It On: A Game About Vaccine Hesitancy [ |
Assessed Not awarded |
Software Knowledge transfer | A role-play video game aiming to improve the capacity of health professionals to respond to their patients’ hesitation to be vaccinated |
| Global Vaccination Risk Assessment [ |
Assessed Not awarded |
Software Knowledge production | A tool to create an overview of risk factors of “not getting vaccinated,” by country, while looking at the more comprehensive picture; the methodology of this project is based on fuzzy logic, multi-criterion analysis, and the risk triangle |
| Immuno [ |
Not assessedd |
Hardware Knowledge transfer | A board game providing access to the general public’s understanding of medical sciences related to immunization |
| Vaccine DataDump [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge production | A vaccination-related data repository and analysis tool for quick analysis of vaccine-related issues |
| Measuring Vaccination Hesitancy From Social Media [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge production | Data analysis of social media (ie, Twitter) to examine whether negative sentiment related to vaccination precedes declaration of symptoms and to study the relationship between vaccination hesitancy and epidemiological outbreaks |
| Mortality According to Access to Vaccines [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge production | Data analysis exploring the link between immunization coverage, mortality rate, and distance from health centers |
| The Health System Matrices [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge production | Exploratory analysis of the various parameters influencing vaccination coverage over time |
| Meta Immune – Data Exploration of Existing DB [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge production | A data lake on immunization data |
| Bilobae [ |
Not assessed |
Intervention | An intervention incentivizing people to increase vaccine uptake through vouchers, supporting the existing mobile app Biloba |
| Wakuchin Senshi [ |
Not assessed |
Intervention Knowledge transfer | An interactive role-play board game to increase awareness about vaccination among the general population |
| Neutralizing Information About Vaccines [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge transfer | An algorithm for parsing web pages, identifying misinformation, and identifying trustworthy content to help users in their health decisions related to vaccines; this also aims to be used by search engines in their recommender systems |
| Go Viral! [ |
Not assessed |
Intervention Knowledge transfer | A communication campaign on social media using gamification methods to illustrate contagion among users and, thereby, increase awareness of the importance of vaccines |
| Make Vaccines Affordable [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge transfer | A web-based portal with data related to population demand for care in order to negotiate prices of vaccines with suppliers |
| Identify Topics of Discussion in Vaccination Posts [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge production | Analysis of discussion in vaccination-related posts on Twitter and their evolution over time |
| Detect Vaccine Administration in Social Media Patient Data [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge production | A classifier able to detect vaccine administration in tweets related to vaccination |
| Detect Vaccine Hesitancy in Social Media Patient Data [ |
Not assessed |
Software Knowledge production | A classifier able to detect vaccine hesitancy in tweets related to vaccination |
aHERA: Health Recording App.
bThese were projects that were assessed by experts at the end of the program. To be assessed by a pool of experts, the project team needed to provide detailed documentation of their project, provide a short video pitch, and deposit their data and code on the Just One Giant Lab (JOGL) platform.
cAPRICOT: Antigen Presentation Using Crispr for TB.
dThese were projects that were not assessed by experts at the end of the program because they did not provide sufficient documentation.
eThe Biloba project, which was not part of Co-Immune, was used as a base to create the team’s own project, as the Biloba founder was a mentor during this event.
Figure 8Bar plot of review scores per category for all reviewed projects. Bars show average values for all questions related to each category, and error bars represent SDs. Projects are shown by decreasing global score. APRICOT: Antigen Presentation Using Crispr for TB; HERA: Health Recording App.