All of Us Data Hub
All of Us Research Program Data and Research Center
This project builds a secure, easy-to-use data hub so researchers can study health and disease using information from a diverse group of people.
Quick facts
| Grant type | NIH-funded research |
|---|---|
| Study type | NIH-funded research |
| Funding institution | Vanderbilt University Medical Center NIH-funded |
| Lab location | 1 site (Nashville, United States) |
| Project ID | NIH-11193000 on NIH RePORTER |
What this research studies
This project builds and runs the All of Us Data and Resource Center, which collects and organizes health records, survey answers, and lab data from people across the U.S. The center creates secure tools and processes so approved researchers can use those data to study many diseases while protecting privacy. Staff provide training, data curation, and user support so researchers can find and analyze the right information. By focusing on diverse participants, the center aims to make research findings more relevant to people from different backgrounds.
Who could benefit from this research
Good fit: People who enroll in the All of Us program—adults across the United States who are willing to share health records, surveys, and samples—are the ideal contributors.
Not a fit: If you need direct medical care or an experimental treatment, this data center won't provide immediate clinical services.
Why it matters
Potential benefit: Could speed up research into causes and treatments for many diseases by giving researchers better, more diverse data.
How similar studies have performed: Large population data hubs like UK Biobank and early All of Us efforts have already helped researchers make discoveries, so this work builds on proven approaches.
Where this research is happening
Nashville, United States
- Vanderbilt University Medical Center — Nashville, United States (Active)
Researchers
- Principal investigator: Harris, Paul a. — Vanderbilt University Medical Center
- Study coordinator: Harris, Paul a.
About this research
- This is an active NIH-funded research project — typically early-stage science, not a clinical trial accepting patient enrollment.
- Some NIH-funded labs run parallel clinical studies or seek volunteers for related work. To check, contact the principal investigator or institution listed above.
- For full project details, budget, and progress reports, visit the official NIH RePORTER page below.