
TIME named Johns Hopkins University professor Lauren Gardner to its 2020 list of the 100 most influential people in the world for developing the website that tracks the COVID-19 pandemic in near-real-time with reliable, independent data.
Gardner, a civil and systems engineering professor in the Whiting School of Engineering, led the team that built the COVID-19 Dashboard in late January. Since then, the dashboard has evolved into the leading source of centralized data on the pandemic, allowing governments, the media and the public to visualize and combat its rapid spread.
“I am deeply honored and humbled to have been individually recognized for an effort that has required the hard work and dedication of so many, including the team at the Applied Physics Lab (APL), our students in the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE), our partners at ESRI, and multiple colleagues from across Johns Hopkins University, who have spent tireless weeks and months collecting, verifying, delivering and communicating on this critical data, in coordination with officials from around the nation and the world,” said Gardner, co-director of CSSE, in a press release.
The dashboard, which collects and displays data from 188 nations, began as an ancillary project with graduate student Ensheng Dong when the disease was still contained in China. As the threat from COVID-19 spread, the map went viral around the world and quickly grew into the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center, harnessing expertise from across Johns Hopkins University. The dashboard filled a major void in the international public health systems for predicting, preventing and tracking diseases that threaten to inflict catastrophic international consequences.
As a result, the dashboard concept has been widely replicated around the world by domestic and foreign governments, media outlets, private enterprises and higher education institutions. An international network of related dashboards is expected to become a permanent fixture in how nations improve coordinated responses to future pandemics and epidemics.
“We initially created and continue to build and maintain this system to address the need for centralized, real-time reporting and open data sharing during an ongoing public health crisis,” Gardner said. “Moving forward, it is imperative that a standardized reporting system for systematically collecting, visualizing and sharing high-quality data on emerging infectious and notifiable diseases in real-time is established.”
The global dashboard is the flagship feature of the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center. The center was built to expand the data, analysis and expertise made available to the world through a coordinated response across every academic division of the university, as well as the Centers for Civic Impact and the APL. Those efforts have been made possible through philanthropic support from Bloomberg Philanthropies and the Stavros Niarchos Foundation.