The limitations of large-scale volunteer databases to address inequalities and global challenges in health and aging.
Large-scale volunteer databanks (LSVD) have emerged from the recognized value of cohorts, attracting substantial funding and promising great scientific value. A major focus is their size, with the implicit and sometimes explicit assumption that large size (thus power) creates generalizability. We contend that this is open to challenge. In the context of aging and age-related disease research, LSVD typically have limitations such as healthy volunteer, white ethnicity and high-education biases, and they omit early and late life stages critical for understanding aging. Their outputs are heavily focused on biomedical pathways of single chronic diseases. LSVD outputs increasingly dominate the funding and the publication landscapes. This Perspective discusses LSVD limitations and calls for more transparent reporting in LSVD research, as well as a greater reflection on the value of LSVD in relation to resources consumed. We invite funders and researchers to examine whether LSVD do actually contribute knowledge needed for our acute global health challenges including inequalities.
Duke Scholars
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- Volunteers
- Humans
- Aging
- 3202 Clinical sciences
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Volunteers
- Humans
- Aging
- 3202 Clinical sciences