Building Research Support Capacity across Human Health Biobanks during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Human health biobanks are forms of research infrastructure that supply biospecimens and associated data to researchers, and therefore juxtapose the activities of clinical care and biomedical research. The discipline of biobanking has existed for over 20 years and is supported by several internationa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jennifer A Byrne, Jane E Carpenter, Candace Carter, Kathleen Phillips, Stephen Braye, Peter H Watson, Amanda Rush
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-06-01
Series:Biomarker Insights
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/11772719211024100
Description
Summary:Human health biobanks are forms of research infrastructure that supply biospecimens and associated data to researchers, and therefore juxtapose the activities of clinical care and biomedical research. The discipline of biobanking has existed for over 20 years and is supported by several international professional societies and dedicated academic journals. However, despite both rising research demand for human biospecimens, and the growth of biobanking as an academic discipline, many individual biobanks continue to experience sustainability challenges. This commentary will summarize how the COVID-19 pandemic is creating new challenges and opportunities for both the health biobanking sector and the supporting discipline of biobanking. While the challenges for biobanks may be numerous and acute, there are opportunities for both individual biobanks and the discipline of biobanking to embrace change such that biobanks can continue to support and drive biomedical research. We will therefore describe numerous practical steps that individual biobanks and/or the discipline of biobanking can take to survive and possibly thrive in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
ISSN:1177-2719