Abstract

BackgroundSince the declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic by the World Health Organization, the disease has gained momentum with every passing day. Various private and government sectors of different countries allocated funding for research in multiple capacities. A significant portion of efforts has been devoted to information technology and service infrastructure development, including research on developing intelligent models and techniques for alerts, monitoring, early diagnosis, prevention, and other relevant services. As a result, many information resources have been created globally and are available for use. However, a defined structure to organize these resources into categories based on the nature and origin of the data is lacking.ObjectiveThis study aims to organize COVID-19 information resources into a well-defined structure to facilitate the easy identification of a resource, tracking information workflows, and to provide a guide for a contextual dashboard design and development.MethodsA sequence of action research was performed that involved a review of COVID-19 efforts and initiatives on a global scale during the year 2020. Data were collected according to the defined structure of primary, secondary, and tertiary categories. Various techniques for descriptive statistical analysis were employed to gain insights into the data to help develop a conceptual framework to organize resources and track interactions between different resources.ResultsInvestigating diverse information at the primary, secondary, and tertiary levels enabled us to develop a conceptual framework for COVID-19–related efforts and initiatives. The framework of resource categorization provides a gateway to access global initiatives with enriched metadata, and assists users in tracking the workflow of tertiary, secondary, and primary resources with relationships between various fragments of information. The results demonstrated mapping initiatives at the tertiary level to secondary level and then to the primary level to reach firsthand data, research, and trials.ConclusionsAdopting the proposed three-level structure allows for a consistent organization and management of existing COVID-19 knowledge resources and provides a roadmap for classifying future resources. This study is one of the earliest studies to introduce an infrastructure for locating and placing the right information at the right place. By implementing the proposed framework according to the stated guidelines, this study allows for the development of applications such as interactive dashboards to facilitate the contextual identification and tracking of interdependent COVID-19 knowledge resources.

Highlights

  • The novel coronavirus—SARS-CoV-2—first appeared in December 2019 and has quickly spread over other regions of the world

  • Adopting the proposed three-level structure allows for a consistent organization and management of existing COVID-19 knowledge resources and provides a roadmap for classifying future resources

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19, the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, a global pandemic [1,2]

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Summary

Introduction

The novel coronavirus—SARS-CoV-2—first appeared in December 2019 and has quickly spread over other regions of the world. The World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19, the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, a global pandemic [1,2]. It gained momentum as every day passed, and private and government sectors of different countries pushed funding toward research on COVID-19 in various capacities. The other portion was devoted to information technology and service infrastructure development, including research to develop intelligent models and techniques for alerts, diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, prevention, and other relevant services [3]. A significant portion of efforts has been devoted to information technology and service infrastructure development, including research on developing intelligent models and techniques for alerts, monitoring, early diagnosis, prevention, and other relevant services. A defined structure to organize these resources into categories based on the nature and origin of the data is lacking

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