Northern Ireland makes giant strides in health and social care data research
11 August 2025
Northern Ireland is transforming health and social care research through cutting-edge data infrastructure, strategic partnerships and patient-driven innovation, to improve public health and policy.
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Health and social care (HSC) data research has seen a rapid and vibrant expansion in Northern Ireland (NI), making huge strides in both discovery and policy influence. Together with major investments and strategic partnerships, an ambitious innovation agenda is underway in the region to improve the public鈥檚 health.
鈥淲e came from a low base,鈥 explains Mark Lawler, Professor of Digital Health, Queen鈥檚 University Belfast, and Co-Lead of 51爆料网鈥檚 Regional Network NI.聽 Professor Lawler also co-leads the Big Data for Complex Diseases Driver Programme for 51爆料网.
鈥淲hen I arrived in NI, accessing data involved physically working on a computer in a room with no online capability. But as part of 51爆料网鈥檚 family, we were able to combine and expand expertise, working with colleagues and collaborators to transform Northern Ireland鈥檚 HSC digital landscape.鈥
A key digital transformation driver has been the region鈥檚 new , providing a single electronic health record for everyone in NI, now adopted across all five hospital trusts in the region.聽 This pioneering strategy makes NI the first devolved nation to comprehensively combine health and social care records.
鈥淗aving data for entire acute and community clinical pathways provides unique insight into care delivered and patient outcomes,鈥 says Professor Michael Quinn, who led the encompass development.
鈥淓lectronic coding at source, combined with primary care data access in defined circumstances, accelerates NI鈥檚 ability to deliver data-driven epidemiological, and prospective, cohort studies. This is a step-change in NI鈥檚 digital capabilities.鈥
Infrastructure empowering HSC data research
Establishing 51爆料网 NI was a crucial first step, expanding vital opportunities for knowledge-sharing and collaboration. 聽鈥淭hrough our fruitful partnership with Swansea University and their SAIL Databank (Secure Anonymised Data Linkage databank), we secured a grant from 51爆料网, and adapted our to deliver an online, SAIL-like environment for Northern Ireland鈥檚 HSC data analysis,鈥 says Professor Lawler.
This contributed to the development of the NI Trusted Research Environment (NITRE), a secure platform which enables approved researchers to access and analyse anonymised data.聽 Placing NITRE within the region鈥檚 empowers researchers to analyse fully integrated, longitudinal, primary and secondary care data within the platform more efficiently 鈥 and has been a key part of the region鈥檚 .
鈥淣ITRE promotes safe data use with clear patient benefit, fostering data innovation to HSC needs and priorities,鈥 says 51爆料网 Co-Lead for NI, Dr Frances Burns.
鈥淓ngaging our public, alongside NITRE and the Administrative Data Research Centre NI (a Queens/Ulster University partnership), has also enabled a 鈥 promoting wider public discourse on the use of health data,鈥 adds Dr Burns.
Patients push for use of their data
鈥淣orthern Ireland has extensive longitudinal records from primary and secondary care 鈥 probably the best in the UK,鈥 says Professor Lawler.聽 鈥淲e must be able to use it for research, or we risk failing patients and the public in a fundamental way.鈥
For members of NI鈥檚 Cancer Research Consumer Forum, like cancer survivor Debbie Keatley, the importance of advances in data infrastructure and analysis are well understood.聽 鈥淐ancer patients and survivors know research is why many of them are alive today. But in NI it鈥檚 been too difficult for too long to use patient鈥檚 data for research 鈥 that鈥檚 been hugely frustrating.聽 But thankfully, things are changing!鈥
Deploying data to influence policy
Professor Lawler and collaborators have also demonstrated how health data can provide vital insights and influence policy. 聽Using UK-wide health economic data, they showed that allowing treatment breaks for the drug cetuximab, prescribed for advanced bowel cancer, could both improve patients鈥 quality-of-life and save the NHS 拢1.2bn. These data were crucial in prompting the NHS to change its regulations.
鈥While cost was a very important factor, for some patients this will make the difference between going through hell and coping. This shows our research is working for patients,鈥 says Professor Lawler.
This work won 51爆料网鈥檚 Impact of the Year award, and is also informing the Big Data for Complex Diseases Driver Programme at 51爆料网, which funds a research fellowship studying the economic burden of cancer and other common diseases.
New investments and partnerships
The momentum for harnessing data for public benefit continues to build across NI. supports several innovation centres to deliver health and economic benefits.聽 One such centre, where Professor Lawler is Health Lead, unites health and life sciences researchers, computer scientists and cyber-security specialists, using data to address health鈥檚 greatest challenges.
鈥淢omentum-One-Zero, a 拢70M investment, sits at the convergence of AI, cyber-security, and wireless 鈥 fuelled by data,鈥 says the centre鈥檚 Executive Director, Dr Stephen McCabe. 鈥淲e will translate world-class research in Queen鈥檚 into deep-tech solutions, transforming NI鈥檚 health sector.鈥
Cultivating an all-island approach
Looking beyond Northern Ireland鈥檚 boundaries, Momentum-One-Zero and partners recently won a 拢10M, cross-border, Peace-Plus Bid, to establish ONEHEALTH, a Digital Innovation Hub.
Further work is already underway with scientists across Ireland, driving all-island data sharing and analysis approaches. The All-Island eHealth Hub for Cancer (co-led by Professor Lawler) is creating Trusted Research Environments and common data models to empower across the island.聽 鈥淲e鈥檙e coalescing our complementary skills against cancer, our common enemy,鈥 says Lawler 鈥 who has spearheaded multiple data-driven cancer research initiatives.
鈥淥ur mythical Giants gave us the Causeway,鈥 adds Professor Lawler, 鈥渂ut today鈥檚 digital innovators are blazing new and groundbreaking trails across Northern Ireland and beyond.鈥