Title: European Partnership for Global Health
1European Partnership for Global Health
Pre-Conference Event Madrid, 31 May, 2007
Research for Health Role of European Foundations
Andres de Francisco, MD, PhD Deputy Executive
Director Global Forum for Health Research
2This presentation
- Global health challenges
- Health research for development
- Financial flows
- Potential role for European Foundations
3This presentation
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5DALY Disability-Adjusted Life Year
years lost due to death Fnyears lived
with illness/disability
6Burden of disease by major cause groups and
country groups, 2002
7Trends in cause distribution of DALYs 1990 to
2002
Africa
1990
2002
Group 3
Group 3
Group 2
Group 2
Group 1
Group 1
Other LMICs
1990
1990
2002
Group 3
Group 3
Group 1
Group 1
Group 2
Group 2
8'Neglected Diseases'
- Diseases
- that are significant sources of mortality and
morbidity - for which there are few or no adequate
interventions (that are relevant to large,
affected populations) - that attract proportionally little funding
9Many 'Neglected Diseases'
- Mortality Estimates for 2002 (World Health Report
2004) - Infectious and Parasitic diseases 10 904 (000)
- HIV/AIDS 2 777
- Diarrhoeal diseases 1 798
- Tuberculosis 1 566
- Malaria 1 272
- Childhood diseases 1 124
- STI (excluding HIV) 180
- Meningitis 173
- (Other) Tropical Diseases 129
- Hepatitis B 103
- Hepatitis C 54
- Dengue 19
- Japanese encephalitis 14
- Intestinal nematode 12
- Leprosy 6
African trypanosomiaisis Chagas
Disease Leishmaniasis Leprosy Lymphatic
filariasis Onchocerciasis Schistosomiasis
10Emerging and re-emerging communicable diseases
- SARS
- vCJD (Mad Cow's disease)
- H5N1 (Bird Flu)
- Pandemics in 1918 (Spanish flu)
- 1957(Asian flu)
- 1968 (Hong Kong flu)
- New communicable diseases appear in human beings
at a rate of more than one per year (every eight
months a new human infectious disease emerges).
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12Economic impact BIRD FLU (1)
- Evolution of the virus H5N1 cannot be predicted
but may - lead to 1 billion cases worldwide
- lead to 2-7 million deaths
- shave Asia's GDP by 3, world economy by 0.5.
- Global Economy may suffer by USD200 billion in
losses if epidemic lasts more than one year (WHO).
13Non communicable diseases
- Large proportion of NCD burden is related to
- demographic changes
- risk factors (tobacco, food, sedentary life)
- socioeconomic gradients
- lack of access to health systems
- As epidemics advance, the poor suffer more
14European Observatory on Health Systems and
Policies
15TANZANIA SES AND CVD RISK FACTORS
Dar Es Salaam (9,254 people 35-64 years)
SES was inversely associated with BP and Smoking
and directly with Body Mass Index -Bovet P et
al, Int J Epi, 2002
16Global health challenges
- Globalization and trade
- Demographic transition and surveillance
- Health financing - Public health spending
- Urbanization, migration and ageing
- Climate change
- Use of evidence for programme development
17Changing demographics
Global population growth, 19502050
Developing countries
Developed countries
Health Financing Revisited A Practioners Guide.
P Gottret, G Schieber, World Bank, 2006
18Urbanization
- New patterns
- Tipping point
- 2007 marks a turning point in human history the
world's urban population for the first time
equals the world's rural population -
-
19'Neglected health systems'
- In many developing countries health systems are
- weak/failing
- under-resourced
- inadequately funded
- poorly managed
- lacking investment in health policy and systems
research - lacking in utilization of the evidence/research
base -
20World Health Report 2006 - Working together for
health
21This presentation
- Global health challenges
- Health research for development
- Financial flows
- Potential role for European Foundations
22The spectrum of health research for development
Biomedical research
Health policy and systems research
Social sciences and behavioural research
Operational research
Basic research physical and biological sciences
including chemistry, pharmacology, toxicology,
genetics, etc
Research on policy formulation, relationship to
evidence, prioritization, etc
Research on social, political, economic,
environmental determinants of health and their
relation to equity, access, lifestyle and
health-seeking behaviours, etc
Research on factors affecting functioning of
programmes, effectiveness of targeting, impact
on behaviour , disease burdens and public
health, etc
Research on health systems management, functions,
efficiency, effectiveness, system factors
affecting access scale-up, monitoring and
evaluation, etc
RD for drugs, vaccines, diagnostics, appliances,
etc
Understanding the biological nature of diseases
creating products to prevent or treat disease
states
Implementation research Understanding how to
test, scale-up and follow through the
introduction of interventions and optimise their
benefits
Innovation
Impact
23The spectrum of health research for development
Biomedical research
Health policy and systems research
Social sciences and behavioural research
Operational research
The spectrum of research for health for
development
Biological, economic, environmental,
political and social determinants of
health
Health is a state of complete physical, mental
and social well-being and not merely the absence
of disease or infirmity. The enjoyment of the
highest attainable standard of health is one of
the fundamental rights of every human being
without distinction of race, religion, political
belief, economic or social condition. WHO
Constitution 1948
24Changing Landscape of Health Research for
Development- I? ?
- Case for health as a vital driver of development
awakening interest in role of health research in
supporting health improvement and health equity - Substantial increased investments in health
research for development new money from
traditional and new sources. - Many new actors in landscape
- New industry interest in diseases mainly
prevalent in LICs
25Changing Landscape of Health Research for
Development- II? ?
- Widening understanding of health attention to
diverse determinants of health. - WHO increased interest in health research
developing new strategy - Many DCs increasing commitment to investing in
research for health developing systematic and
equitable approaches to the creation and use of
knowledge and innovation
26This presentation
- Global health challenges
- Health research for development
- Financial flows
- Potential role for European Foundations
27On health and research
- Global Health Spending
- 3.2 trillion USD (2002)
- 350 Billion USD in LMICs
- Global Health Research Spending
- 125 billion USD (2003)
28Global health research expenditure
45 Public 48 Private For profit 7 Not
for profit
29Health Research Expenditures(based on
bibliometric RD data)
Lewinson G, Rippon I, de Francisco A, Lipworth
S Research Evaluation, Dec. 2004
30Enough funding for research?
- Are current investments in research for health
adequate to enhance our ability to deal with
global health problems? - Is our understanding of research gaps (social
determinants, policy issues, biomedical tools)
for health in developing countries adequate? -
- What evidence is required to design and implement
sustainable, high level impact on health
programmes in developing countries? - What of the current research agenda is useable in
developing countries failing health systems?
31Fragmentation in international effort .
32Aid flows
2002 58 billion total aid flows from rich
countries to poor ones 2000 - 2002 new aid
project commitments Mozambique 1,413 India
1,339 China 1,328 Tanzania 1,371 2003 Tanzania
declared a four-month mission holiday,
receiving only the most urgent visits by donors
Source Foreign Policy, Ranking the Rich 2004
33Bilateral Donor Support to Tanzania, 2000-2002
Source Foreign Policy, Ranking the Rich 2004
34- Health research in a systems context
- Move away from project mode research
- Incorporate health research in national plans
- Put government in driving seat
- Develop coherent funding approaches
35Financing health research how to reduce the
10/90 gap
- Government financing of health research for
development - HICs
- - give greater priority in national research
programmes - - include more health research in bilateral and
multilateral channels - LMICs
- - give greater priority in national programmes
- - build capacity (funding and environment) for
national health research systems innovation
36Resource Flows Data for Selected ODA Agencies,
2001
37Philanthropy
- 50 most generous philanthropists collectively
donated over US 50 billion, 1999-2003 - Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
- - US29.2 billion endowment
- - Warren Buffett adds over US30 billion at 5 /
year
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39Public-Private Partnerships
- PPPs now conduct 75 of all neglected disease RD
projects (47 projects) - PPP RD expenditure has increased dramatically
since their creation - direct RD has doubled between 2003 and 2004
Dr Mary Moran 2005
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41This presentation
- Global health challenges
- Health research for development
- Financial flows
- Potential role for European Foundations
42Potential role for European Foundations
- Take leadership in the changing landscape of
global health research for development - Build upon undergoing segmented efforts
- Use the ability to commit long-term support
instead of short-term project support - Develop a coherent approach to research based on
the spectrum of research for health