Annals of Global Health (Jun 2023)

Increasing Effectiveness and Equity in Strengthening Health Research Capacity Using Data and Metrics: Recent Advances of the ESSENCE Mechanism

  • Peter H. Kilmarx,
  • Thabi Maitin,
  • Taghreed Adam,
  • Garry Aslanyan,
  • Michael Cheetham,
  • Janelle Cruz,
  • Martin Eigbike,
  • Oumar Gaye,
  • Catherine M. Jones,
  • Linda Kupfer,
  • John Lindo,
  • Rhona Mijumbi,
  • Jean B. Nachega,
  • Jamie Bay Nishi,
  • Irini Pantelidou,
  • Malabika Sarker,
  • Soumya Swaminathan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3948
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 89, no. 1
pp. 38 – 38

Abstract

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Background: The ESSENCE on Health Research initiative established a Working Group on Review of Investments in 2018 to improve coordination and collaboration among funders of health research capacity strengthening. The Working Group comprises more than a dozen ESSENCE members, including diverse representation by geography, country income level, the public sector, and philanthropy. Objective: The overall goal of the Working Group is increased research on national health priorities as well as improved pandemic preparedness, and, ultimately, fewer countries with very limited research capacity. Methods: We developed a basic set of metrics for national health research capacity, assessed different models of coordination and collaboration, took a deeper dive into eight countries to characterize their national research capacity, and began to identify opportunities to better coordinate our investments. In this article, we summarize the presentations, discussions, and outcomes of our second annual (virtual) meeting, which had more than 100 participants representing funders, researchers, and other stakeholders from higher- and lower-income countries worldwide. Findings and conclusions: Presentations on the first day included the keynote speaker, Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, chief scientist of the World Health Organization (WHO), and updates on data and metrics for research capacity, which are critical to establish targets, road maps, and budgets. The second day focused on improving collaboration and coordination among funders and other stakeholders, the potential return on investment for health research, ongoing work to increase coordination at the country level, and examples of research capacity strengthening efforts in diverse health research areas from around the world. We concluded that an intentional data- and metric-driven approach to health research capacity strengthening, emphasizing coordination among funders, local leadership, and equitable partnerships and allocation of resources, will enhance the health systems of resource-poor countries as well as the world’s pandemic preparedness.

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