The data principles of the World Health Organization (WHO) provide a foundation for continually reaffirming trust in WHO’s information and evidence on public health.
The five WHO data principles are designed to provide a framework for data governance for WHO. The principles are intended primarily for use by WHO staff across all parts of the Organization in order to help define the values and standards that govern how data that flows into, across and out of WHO is collected, processed, shared and used. These principles are made publicly available so that they may be used and referred to by Member States and non-state actors collaborating with WHO.
WHO’s data principles are based on an internal consultation process involving data collection staff from WHO headquarters and regional offices who compiled and analyzed the data principles and best practices. The principles were reviewed in consultation with external experts, convened by WHO, in May-June 2020 and released on 10 August 2020.
WHO shall make every effort to release data publicly and to share when safe and ethical to do so. Unless there is a legitimate justification to the contrary, WHO shall make data open and accessible to the public in line with data being a public good.
This principle also applies to data such as vital registration, survey data and the results of estimation and research, and situations in which data have been shared with WHO by non-Member State entities (including private-sector data producers) that collaborate with WHO on common projects.
WHO will:
WHO shall uphold the trust placed in it by Member States when the Organization processes data that Member States have shared with it and placed under WHO’s control.
WHO will:
WHO shall support Member States’ capacity-building activities, aiming for sustainability and sharing of best practices wherever it can – specifically for the development of sound data governance, health management information systems, public health statistics, health-related data science and health data innovation.
WHO will:
WHO will ensure that all data made available to it are processed, maintained, analysed, disseminated and used in accordance with international standards and best practices in health data management. This includes all relevant United Nations data governance standards and guidance that apply to WHO pursuant to its mandate, including the standards referenced in the preamble.
WHO shall ensure that all data it produces are of consistently high standards that include transparent audit trails and common reference years, as well as being timely, accurate, comparable and (where technically and legally possible) accessible.
WHO will:
WHO will support Member States to fill data gaps in public health data, using empirical data collection and predictive, transparent and coherent modelling methods with proven validity.
WHO will:
WHO is committed to strengthening the global ecosystem of public health data. This includes building internal data governance capacities. The WHO data principles act as the foundations for data-related policies, plans and programme implementation.
In 2018, WHO established the Data, Analytics and Delivery for Impact (DDI) Division, promoting data as a strategic asset. In 2020, WHO strengthened its data coordination and governance by instituting a two-level internal data governance system with: a strategic Data Governance Committee, chaired by the Assistant Director-General for DDI and the Deputy Director-General, and an operationally grounded, federated structure known as the Data Hub and Spoke Collaborative, chaired by the Director of Data and Analytics (DNA), DDI.
This two-level governance system aims to promote ownership of data governance issues as an area of strategic importance, as well as to increase accountability and efficiency and to streamline the end-to-end processes and systems for collecting, storing, analysing, disseminating and using data. Beyond internal stakeholders, WHO will also seek advice as necessary from external expert groups such as the Reference Group on Health Statistics and the External Expert Group on Data Sharing.
WHO ensures the timeliness, reliability and validity of measurements, ensuring comparability of data and allowing the world to track trends, progress and impact.