Plamondon Katrina, Walters Dylan, Campbell Sandy, Hatfield Jennifer
Research Department, Interior Health, Kelowna, BC, Canada.
School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, 3333 University Drive, Kelowna, BC, V1V 1V7, Canada.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2017 Aug 29;15(1):72. doi: 10.1186/s12961-017-0236-2.
Recognising radical shifts in the global health research (GHR) environment, participants in a 2013 deliberative dialogue called for careful consideration of equity-centred principles that should inform Canadian funding polices. This study examined the existing funding structures and policies of Canadian and international funders to inform the future design of a responsive GHR funding landscape.
We used a three-pronged analytical framework to review the ideas, interests and institutions implicated in publically accessible documents relevant to GHR funding. These data included published literature and organisational documents (e.g. strategic plans, progress reports, granting policies) from Canadian and other comparator funders. We then used a deliberative approach to develop recommendations with the research team, advisors, industry informants and low- and middle-income country (LMIC) partners.
In Canada, major GHR funders invest an estimated CA$90 M per annum; however, the post-2008 re-organization of funding structures and policies resulted in an uncoordinated and inefficient Canadian strategy. Australia, Denmark, the European Union, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States of America invest proportionately more in GHR than Canada. Each of these countries has a national strategic plan for global health, some of which have dedicated benchmarks for GHR funding and policy to allow funds to be held by partners outside of Canada. Key constraints to equitable GHR funding included (1) funding policies that restrict financial and cost burden aspects of partnering for GHR in LMICs; and (2) challenges associated with the development of effective governance mechanisms. There were, however, some Canadian innovations in funding research that demonstrated both unconventional and equitable approaches to supporting GHR in Canada and abroad. Among the most promising were found in the International Development Research Centre and the (no longer active) Global Health Research Initiative.
Promoting equitable GHR funding policies and practices in Canada requires cooperation and actions by multiple stakeholders, including government, funding agencies, academic institutions and researchers. Greater cooperation and collaboration among these stakeholders in the context of recent political shifts present important opportunities for advancing funding policies that enable and encourage more equitable investments in GHR.
认识到全球卫生研究(GHR)环境的巨大转变,2013年一次审议对话的参与者呼吁仔细考虑以公平为中心的原则,这些原则应指导加拿大的资助政策。本研究考察了加拿大和国际资助者现有的资助结构和政策,以为未来设计一个响应式的全球卫生研究资助格局提供参考。
我们采用了一个三管齐下的分析框架,来审视与全球卫生研究资助相关的公开文件中涉及的理念、利益和机构。这些数据包括已发表的文献以及加拿大和其他对照资助者的组织文件(如战略计划、进展报告、资助政策)。然后,我们采用一种审议方法,与研究团队、顾问、行业信息提供者以及低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC)的合作伙伴共同制定建议。
在加拿大,主要的全球卫生研究资助者每年估计投资9000万加元;然而,2008年后资助结构和政策的重组导致了加拿大战略的不协调和低效。澳大利亚、丹麦、欧盟、挪威、瑞典、英国和美国在全球卫生研究方面的投资比例高于加拿大。这些国家中的每一个都有全球卫生国家战略计划,其中一些计划为全球卫生研究资助和政策设定了专门的基准,以便资金能够由加拿大以外的合作伙伴持有。公平的全球卫生研究资助的主要制约因素包括:(1)限制低收入和中等收入国家全球卫生研究伙伴关系中财务和成本负担方面的资助政策;(2)与有效治理机制发展相关的挑战。然而,加拿大在资助研究方面有一些创新举措,展示了在支持国内外全球卫生研究方面的非常规且公平的方法。其中最有前景的举措见于国际发展研究中心和(已不再活跃的)全球卫生研究倡议。
在加拿大促进公平的全球卫生研究资助政策和实践需要包括政府、资助机构、学术机构和研究人员在内的多个利益相关者的合作与行动。在近期政治转变的背景下,这些利益相关者之间加强合作与协作,为推进资助政策提供了重要机遇,这些政策能够促成并鼓励对全球卫生研究进行更公平的投资。