- Posted August 27, 2020
- Artificial Intelligence, Big data analytics, Data analysis, Data collection, European Commission (DG SANTE), Focus Groups, Health, ICT, Innovation, Interviews, online questionnaire, Stakeholder Engagement, Systematic review
Open Evidence, in consortium with EY Healthcare, LifeSTech – Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM) will lead a new study for the European Commission (DG SANTE) on cross-border digital healthcare in the EU, with particular focus on potential regulatory gaps and barriers to the cross-border provision of digital health services and products. The consortium will provide […]
Open Evidence, in consortium with London School of Economics, BDI Research and Kantar TNS has been entrusted by the European Commission to conduct the study “Behavioural Study on Advertising and Marketing Practices in travel booking websites and apps”. The study will contribute to the understanding of the interaction of travel websites with consumers, and will […]
The study analyses industry's participation patterns to FP6 and FP7 and the impact of this participation on innovation and job creation.
This study focusses on the analysis of an emerging market which is still evolving and is likely to grow fast in the next 3 years - with new actors coming in from other sectors or arising (start-ups) and new business models developing. The results of this study will feed into the annual reviews of the Digital Agenda Scoreboard providing valuable data and information for the 3 years covered by the project.
The study comprises the definition of a set of input, output, outcome and impact indicators, as well as a framework to monitor the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (Digital Agenda for Europe flagship initiative) based on systematic review and case studies.
The project aims at analysing and redefining how knowledge is created and shared within and outbound the organization.
In light of the eGovernment benchmarking exercise of 2012, the objective of the study is to perform in-depth analysis of the data collected in the 2012 eGovernment benchmarking exercise in order to obtain relevant insights on the state of eGovernment in Europe in the context of current EU eGovernment policy, and to produce a coherent narrative showcasing and interpreting those insights.
The objective of this study is to assess the technological requirements and available tools on Internet-related policy-making process and develop an online platform that collects and analyses information thereon. It is sought to provide a set of recommendations on the best “internal governance framework” of this platform, ensuring maximum levels of transparency, accountability, independence and inclusivity.
Supporting the application of the eGEP Measurement Framework as the key measuring tool for measuring the impact of eGovernment services in Greece, benchlearning pilots were conducted to measure the impacts in terms of efficiency and administrative burden reduction for citizens and businesses of online tax services.
This was the second edition of the three years project and focussed on developing indicators to measure the availability and take up of public eProcurement. Instrumental to this work, an institutional mapping of the main procurement players and of the institutional and regulatory bases for public procurement in 27 EU countries was developed.