2. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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WHO Strategy on Research for Health
WHO’s role in research for health…..
and the role of research in WHO…
Recognizes research as central to progress in global health
Identifies how WHO can work with Member States and partners to
harness knowledge, science and technology to produce research
evidence and tools to improve health outcomes.
3. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Sustained Global interest
1990: Commission on Health Research for
Development
1996: Ad Hoc Committee on Health Research
Relating to Future Intervention Options
2000: International Conference on Health
Research for Development (Bangkok)
2004: Ministerial Summit on Health Research
(Mexico)
2008: Bamako Ministerial Forum on Research
for Health
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Complex array of initiatives
Member States looking to WHO for
guidance and leadership
5. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Mandate
Resolution WHA60.15 at 60th World Health Assembly
May 2007
requesting the DG…
"to submit to the Sixty-Second World Health
Assembly (2009) a strategy on the management
and organization of research activities within
WHO"
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Evaluation
Framework
Implementation
Planning
INPUTS
Rolling Dialogue: Virtual & Face-to-Face
Emergent
Themes
Emergent
Themes
Working drafts
Regional offices
Special
Programmes, HQ
CCs
Executive
Board
Jan 09
EB124/4.9
Strategy development - a
participatory process
WHO
Research
Strategy –
WHA
2009
100
Stakeholder
Interviews
Online &
Face to face
workshops
Strategy+
annexes
Advisory
Committe
e
on Health
Research
External
& Internal
Reference
Groups
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Guidance from the Director General
"….not spread our resources too thin…know our
comparative advantage …stick with activities that WHO is
uniquely well-suited to perform"
"make evidence have the right impact… strengthen the
legitimacy, quality and efficiency of our policy development
processes"
"...ensure that the best practices that science can devise
are being followed"
"….integrate WHO's research activities to more
strategically address a common health research agenda"
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What we heard from the consultation
Bridge gap between policy makers
and researchers.
Champion cause that evidence is
needed to address priority public
health needs
“Get out of the health box”- links with
economic, social, cultural factors. How
these factors shape health outcomes
and how health impacts on them.
Translate research questions and
findings into terms (e.g. cost savings)
that policy makers and practitioners
find persuasive
Focus on application or implementation of existing know-how
Build, in pragmatic ways, local capacity (individuals and institutions) to develop
and use relevant evidence
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What we heard from the consultation
Conducted according to sound
standards and ethical principles
Well communicated and used
locally
Use a shared, broader definition of
research: Application,
Implementation and Evaluation.
WHO to support and guide
countries; decision making and
accountability is countries'
responsibility.
Evidence-based policy vital in
WHO’s work and core public health
function
10. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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WHO Strategy on
Research for Health
11. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Research for health – Three principles
Quality - WHO commits itself to high-quality research that is
ethical, expertly reviewed, efficient, effective, accessible to all, and
carefully monitored and evaluated.
Impact - WHO gives priority to research and innovation that has
the greatest potential to improve global health security, accelerate
health-related development, redress health inequities and help to
attain the Millennium Development Goals.
Inclusiveness - The Secretariat undertakes to work in
partnership with Member States and stakeholders, to take a
multisectoral approach to research for health, and to support and
promote the participation of communities and civil society in the
research process.
12. ORGANIZATION
Strengthen the research culture across WHO
STANDARDS
Promote good
research practice
TRANSLATION
Strengthen links
between research,
policy and practice
CAPACITY
Support the
development of
robust national health
research systems
PRIORITIES
Champion research
that addresses priority
health needs
WHO STRATEGY ON RESEARCH FOR HEALTH
VISION
decisions and actions to improve health and enhance health
equity are grounded in evidence from research.
MISSION
WHO, Member States and partners work together to harness knowledge, science and
technology to produce research evidence and tools to improve health
5
Goals
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Organization
Working with Member States and
partners, WHO will:
Establish governance structures to lead, manage,
coordinate and maintain accountability for research
within WHO;
Develop and implement a WHO Code of Good
Research Practice;
Strengthen existing mechanisms for good research
practice;
Enhance professional staff competencies;
Improve access to WHO-affiliated research by
developing a publicly accessible repository;
Improve performance in research partnerships by:
i) reviewing partnership admin processes; and
ii) proactively seeking to engage with partners across
all sectors that impact on research for health;
Improve communications on the Organization’s
involvement in research, monitoring and evaluation of
this strategy.
What success will look like:
WHO staff better understand, value and use evidence
in planning, implementing and evaluating programmes
and activities and in setting norms and standards;
All research supported by WHO adheres to the
Organization’s Code of Good Research Practice and is
subject to scientific review and, where appropriate,
ethical review; every guideline and recommendation is
evidence-based and every article is peer reviewed;
WHO’s role in research and the role of research within
WHO are clearly communicated;
WHO is widely regarded as a credible, evidence-based
organization; a leader in supporting or performing high-
quality research; a champion of the need for research
and for being an effective partner in facilitating high-
quality research at global, regional and country level;
WHO commits sufficient resources to support core
functions necessary for the implementation of the
strategy.
Code of good
Research practice
WHO a more effective
partner in research
14. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Priorities
Working with Member States and
partners, WHO will:
Ensure mechanisms are in place to synthesize data on
gaps in research relating to current health and health
system challenges at national and global levels;
Convene high-level consultations to identify and build
consensus around priorities;
Produce a report every four years on global research
priorities with an assessment of the alignment of
financial and human resources with research agendas;
Develop comprehensive research agendas for specific
priority areas and develop resource-mobilization plans
for such research agendas;
Advocate support for research areas;
Strengthen the coherence of WHO research activities
by establishing mechanisms for periodically reviewing
the portfolio of research agendas, including decision
criteria for initiation, course corrections and exit
strategies of programmes.
What success will look like:
greater awareness of, and action on, research priorities
at a national level;
greater awareness of, and action on, research priorities
at a regional and global level;
improved cooperation and coordination
among research funders and other key partners to
align global resources to meet priority health research
needs;
more robust agendas for research on specific priority
areas that are facilitated by WHO. Greater coherence
and clarity on how WHO is supporting/actively engaged
in these specific agendas.
Convene high-level
Consultation of funders
Better alignment of funders
around priority areas
15. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Capacity
Working with Member States and
partners, WHO will:
Strengthen advocacy for the value of research and for
the development of robust national health research
systems;
Develop tools and guidelines for strengthening national
capacity;
Promote the development of comprehensive health
information systems to inform national research
priorities;
Develop and use standardized indicators to enable self-
reporting of the performance of national health research
systems and monitor global progress;
Facilitate technical assistance to support the
strengthening of national health research systems;
Develop institutional capacity, regional and global
networks, involvement of WHO Collaborating Centres,
to report and share good practice;
Maximize the impact of research capacity-
strengthening efforts through improved alignment of
WHO’s research programmes and activities.
What success will look like:
Greater investment in research for health by countries
and from other sectors;
All countries, especially low- and middle-income ones,
have national research strategies;
External stakeholders align their research investments
with national research strategies;
WHO guidelines on research capacity-strengthening,
including indicators for measuring progress, have been
developed and are being used;
WHO reports progress periodically on national research
capacity and activities through its governing bodies and
information databases;
Networks of researchers and communities of practice
are actively exchanging experiences and identifying
good practices in strengthening research capacity;
WHO’s research capacity-strengthening efforts in-
country are aligned with country needs, resulting in
higher-quality, better-coordinated research activities.
Advocate for strong NHRS All countries have national
health research strategies
16. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Standards
What success will look like:
Public support and trust for health and medical
research is strengthened;
WHO has implemented an improved method for
selecting, developing, implementing and evaluating its
work on norms and standards related to research;
Greater awareness, acceptance, implementation and
compliance with standards for the management and
use of research leading to an improved quality,
efficiency, transparency, accountability and equity in
the research process;
Improved acceptance and compliance with ethical
principles in the conduct of research, and standards
established for accreditation of ethics committees;
Registration of clinical trials according to WHO
standards is adopted by all countries.
Working with Member States and
partners, WHO will:
Develop a systematic method for selecting, developing,
implementing and evaluating new standards and norms
in line with priorities in research for health;
Develop norms and standards, in line with the guiding
principles of this strategy, for best practice in the
management and use of research;
Continue to facilitate the development of and set
standards for publicly accessible registries of clinical
trials;
Engage in technical cooperation with Member States to
enable them to adapt, implement and monitor
adherence and compliance to the norms and standards
for research.
Which standards?
Better awareness,
acceptance & compliance
17. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Translation
Working with Member States and
partners, WHO will:
Identify promising translation activities, promote their
use to support decision-making based on the best
available research evidence;
Promote the use of effective technology transfer
models and the evaluation of promising models to
support the timely creation of new products and
services in Member States;
Work towards the creation of and compliance with
international standards on health informatics for
research;
Develop, strengthen and evaluate mechanisms for the
systematic development of evidence summaries and
guidance for citizens, patients, clinicians, managers
and policy-makers in Member States;
Systematically analyze barriers and encourage the
development or modification of existing mechanisms to
promote greater access to research results;
Develop and articulate a WHO position on open access
to research outputs.
What success will look like:
Decision-makers act as informed consumers of
research; Researchers are more responsive to the
demand side;
institutional mechanisms are in place for capturing and
sharing lessons learned from research on the demand
for research and how evidence is used in policy and
practice at country level;
Research to understand the translation of evidence into
policy and practice is in place and recognized;
internationally agreed standards are created and widely
applied for the collection, storing and sharing of health
informatics;
repositories inclusive of WHO research literature are
established, well populated, regularly updated and well
used;
Reliable, relevant, appropriate and timely information is
freely available to both producers and users of research
in a format and language they understand;
WHO plays a more prominent role in identifying
effective health interventions and strategies, and
promoting their implementation in Member States.
Identify best translation
activities
Research informs policy &
policy informs research
18. ORGANIZATION
Strengthen the research culture across WHO
STANDARDS
Promote good
research practice
TRANSLATION
Strengthen links
between research,
policy and practice
CAPACITY
Support the
development of
robust national health
research systems
PRIORITIES
Champion research
that addresses priority
health needs
WHO STRATEGY ON RESEARCH FOR HEALTH
VISION
decisions and actions to improve health and enhance health
equity are grounded in evidence from research.
MISSION
WHO, Member States and partners work together to harness knowledge, science and
technology to produce research evidence and tools to improve health
5
Goals
19. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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A framework for research for health priorities
Research on
neglected
priority
needs
Translation and delivery
of the solution
20. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR)
Neglected
priority
needs
Translation and delivery
of the solution
TDR
• Selected drug development and
field interventions (TB/HIV,
helminths, other NTD )
• Innovate vector control
interventions
• Evidence for antimalarial policy and access
• Visceral leishmaniasis elimination
• Integrated community-based interventions
Lead discovery for drugs
(screening/optimizing drug leads for tropical diseases
• Innovation and access in diagnosis
TDR Research business lines
21. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Research strategy on Foodborne Disease Burden,
its impact and on effective interventions
Research on
neglected
priority
needs
Translation and delivery
of the solution
Priority No 1No
global burden of
FBD estimates
currently exist
Priority No 2
Determinants of burden
partially known but not
synthesized
Solutions fairly well
described but not always
evidence-based – this
might have to be revisited
after strategy has been
executed in its entirety
Priority No 4
Solutions often not linked to evidence
– this requires re-examination and
new application
Priority No 3
Food Safety
standard setting,
control and
interventions are
well described but
impact often not
known
FOS
22. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Links to Bamako and the Global Strategy
Plan of Action (from the IGWG)
WHO
Strategy
Global Strategy Plan of
Action – No. elements
Bamako Ministerial Forum
Call for Action by Ministers
Priorities 1- priorities
2 - cooperation
7- sustainable funding
Set priorities
2% health budget for research
Capacity 3 – capacity R&D for products
2 - cooperation
Build institutional capacity
Regional Cooperation
Build capacity in science through education
Standards 6 – ethical review, QA Clinical trials
Open access to research outputs, products and
technologies
Translation 2 – strengthen national health
research
Promote translation - 5% of funding to support this
Research in all policies
23. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Implementation
Approval by Member States at EB and WHA in 2009
Review, discussion of governance, financing
A strategy for implementation; detailed plan needed
Decentralized implementation-key role for Regional Offices
to implement strategy after alignment with agendas, plans
and strategies
Incorporation into work plans, country cooperation strategy
24. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Evaluation
Evaluation framework developed to give impact-focussed
approach for assessing achievement of vision, mission
and goals
Framework components: inputs/activities, outputs,
outcomes and impacts
Indicators for each component defined for tracking
purposes
Report on progress to governing bodies in 2012
25. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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"Through the research strategy, what
can WHO do to help democratize R&D
so that knowledge is not just for the
rich and is equitably used to improve
health for all peoples?"
Dr Anarfi Asamoa-Baah
WHO Deputy Director-General
November, 2007
26. WHO Strategy on Research for Health | January 2009
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Many thanks
Further information can be obtained from:
SharePoint: http://www.who.int/rpc/research_strategy
Robert Terry
Project Manager - WHO Research Strategy,
Research Policy & Cooperation (RPC/IER),
World Health Organization
Email: terryr@who.int
Tel No : +41 22 7912632
Mob No:+41 792446091
http://www.who.int/rpc
Acknowledgements
The WHO strategy on research for health
was developed with support from :
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
The Wellcome Trust
The Department of Health, UK