Global Strategy Lab, Dahdaleh Institute for Global Health Research, Faculty of Health, and Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, 4700 Keele Street 2120 Dahdaleh Building, Toronto, Ontario, M3J 1P3, Canada.
School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2020 Apr 9;18(1):37. doi: 10.1186/s12961-020-0543-x.
Many countries are currently rethinking their global health research funding priorities. When resources are limited, it is important to understand and use information about existing research strengths to inform research strategies and investments and to drive impact. This study describes a method to rapidly assess a country's global health research expertise and applies this method in the Canadian context.
We developed a three-pronged rapid environmental scan to evaluate Canadian global health research expertise that focused on research funding inputs, research activities and research outputs. We assessed research funding inputs from Canada's national health research funding agency and identified the 30 Canadian universities that received the most global health research funding. We systematically searched university websites and secondary databases to identify research activities, including research centres, research chairs and research training programmes. To evaluate research outputs, we searched PubMed to identify global health research publications by Canadian university-affiliated researchers. We used these three perspectives to develop a more nuanced understanding of Canadian strengths in global health research from different perspectives.
Canada's main global health research funder, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, invested a total of $314 M from 2000 to 2016 on global health research grants. This investment has contributed to Canada's wealth of global health research expertise, including 12 training programmes, 27 Canada Research Chairs, 6 research centres and 30 WHO Collaborating Centres across 27 universities. Research activities were concentrated in Canada's biggest cities and most commonly focused on health equity and globalisation issues. Canadian-affiliated researchers have contributed to a research output of 822 unique publications on PubMed. There is an opportunity to build global health expertise in regions not already concentrated with research activity, focusing on transnational risks and neglected conditions research.
Our three-pronged approach allowed us to rapidly identify clear geographic and substantive areas of strength in Canadian global health research, including urban regions and research focused on health equity and globalisation topics. This information can be used to support research policy directives, including to inform a Canadian global health research strategy, and to allow relevant academic institutions and funding organisations to make more strategic decisions regarding their future investments.
目前,许多国家正在重新思考其全球卫生研究资金的优先事项。在资源有限的情况下,了解和利用现有研究优势的信息对于制定研究战略和投资以及推动影响力至关重要。本研究描述了一种快速评估国家全球卫生研究专业知识的方法,并在加拿大背景下应用了该方法。
我们开发了一种三管齐下的快速环境扫描方法,以评估加拿大的全球卫生研究专业知识,重点关注研究资金投入、研究活动和研究成果。我们评估了加拿大国家卫生研究资助机构的研究资金投入,并确定了获得全球卫生研究资金最多的 30 所加拿大大学。我们系统地搜索了大学网站和辅助数据库,以确定研究活动,包括研究中心、研究主席和研究培训计划。为了评估研究成果,我们在 PubMed 中搜索了加拿大大学附属研究人员的全球卫生研究出版物。我们使用这三个角度从不同角度更细致地了解加拿大在全球卫生研究方面的优势。
加拿大主要的全球卫生研究资助者加拿大卫生研究院在 2000 年至 2016 年期间共投资了 3.14 亿加元用于全球卫生研究赠款。这项投资为加拿大丰富的全球卫生研究专业知识做出了贡献,包括 12 个培训计划、27 个加拿大研究主席、6 个研究中心和 27 所大学的 30 个世界卫生组织合作中心。研究活动集中在加拿大最大的城市,最常见的重点是卫生公平和全球化问题。加拿大附属研究人员在 PubMed 上发表了 822 篇独特的研究论文。有机会在尚未集中研究活动的地区建立全球卫生专业知识,重点关注跨国风险和被忽视的条件研究。
我们的三管齐下的方法使我们能够快速确定加拿大全球卫生研究的明确地理和实质性优势领域,包括城市地区以及专注于卫生公平和全球化主题的研究。这些信息可用于支持研究政策指令,包括为制定加拿大全球卫生研究战略提供信息,并使相关学术机构和资助组织能够就其未来投资做出更具战略性的决策。