# Sharing and reuse of mental health research data: Introducing the HeSANDA mental health node

**Authors:** Alison R Yung, Nemanja Zivanov, Marko Milicevic, Kristan Kang, Andrew Thompson, Alyna Turner, Ayla Barutchu, Lourdes Llorente, Delyth Samuel, Olivia M Dean, Rhys Williams, Suzie Lavoie

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/10398562251382462 · Australasian Psychiatry · 2025-09-27

## TL;DR

The paper introduces the Mental Health Node, an initiative to promote ethical data sharing in mental health research.

## Contribution

The Mental Health Node is introduced as a new initiative to facilitate and support mental health data sharing in Australia.

## Key findings

- Data sharing can enhance research integrity and accelerate knowledge creation.
- The Mental Health Node aims to address ethical and governance concerns in data sharing.
- The paper provides recommendations and resources for effective data sharing practices.

## Abstract

Data sharing is the practice of making de-identified participant-level data available for use by other researchers. It increases the potential of a dataset to answer new questions, accelerates knowledge creation and increases research integrity by allowing conclusions to be replicated, verified or corrected. Data sharing helps fulfil the ethical obligation to make the most of research participants’ contributions to science.

There is evidence that research participants and the general public are supportive of data sharing. However, those who conducted the original studies may be reluctant to share data, and datasets may be difficult to access, and there may be ethical and governance concerns.

This paper describes the Mental Health Node, an Australian Government initiative that aims to increase mental health data sharing. The Mental Health Node works with primary researchers (those who conduct original studies), and secondary researchers (those who reuse data generated by others) to promote ethical data sharing that respects the role of primary researchers and the privacy concerns of research participants.

Primary and secondary researchers can collaborate to maximise the value of data collected. This paper includes recommendations for good practice in data sharing and links to resources.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819886/full.md

## References

25 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819886/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819886