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Global Work of WHO in Health Research. A Review. Tikki Pang Innovation, Information, Evidence & Research WHO, Geneva, Switzerland. WHO Strategy on Research for Health. WHO's role in research & role of research in WHO Requested by Member States during 60 th WHA (2007)
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Global Work of WHOin Health Research A Review Tikki Pang Innovation, Information, Evidence & Research WHO, Geneva, Switzerland
WHO Strategy on Research for Health • WHO's role in research & role of research in WHO • Requested by Member States during 60th WHA (2007) • Extensive consultative process (HQ & regions (2008-2009) • Approved by 63rd WHA (2010) • Implementation in regions from 2010 (Progress Report to EB/WHA in 2012)
3 Principles Quality-high-quality research that is ethical, expertly reviewed, efficient, effective, accessible to all, and carefully monitored and evaluated. Impact- priority for research with greatest potential to improve global health security, health-related development, redress health inequities and attain MDGs Inclusiveness - work in partnership, Member States and stakeholders, multisectoral approach, support and promote the participation of communities and civil society in the research process. 5 GOALS
Roll out to WHO Regional Offices1 approved, 4 in development EURO 7 & 8 June 2011 SEARO 6,7 & 8 July 2011 WPRO Data sharing research governance, 16 & 17 August 2011 AMRO/PAHO Approved Policy 2009 EMRO Under development 5 & 6 June 2011 AFRO Under development: Algiers Declaration
Other implementation activities related to the Strategy • Reference and use of strategy by WHO departments (e.g. priority setting checklist) • Clarifying classification of research • Mapping of R&D • Links to GSPA-PHI • Links to WHR2012
http://www.who.int/phi/implementation/phi_globstat_action/en/index.htmlhttp://www.who.int/phi/implementation/phi_globstat_action/en/index.html
Five goals of the research strategy map directly onto a number of Actions described under GSPA elements, in particular: Contact: Rob Terry, terryr@who.int
World Health Report 2012 Research for Health
WHY? • Demand-ongoing and future health threats will require more research • Concern- emerging research areas present potential benefits but also threats & harms • Desire for accountability-growing expectation that scientific evidence should inform decisions in health, and that impact of programmes are rigorously evaluated • Drive for social justice-increasing concern that research be conducted ethically, be transparent & accountable, and its results accessible - so that benefits & outcomes are equitably shared by all • Uncertainty and lack of trust
DG's Expectations • Demystify research • Target non-researchers • Primary audience: ministers of health • Of practical value to LMIC's, outward, forward-looking • Permits everyone to see their place in producing and using research • Send a message that research serves the core business of all actors in health • Not simply showcasing WHO's achievements in research
Chapter 1. Communicating the Value of Research Chapter 2. Capturing the Benefits of Research Chapter 3. Investing in Research for Health Chapter 4. Planning for Research Chapter 5. Working with regional & Global Partners
Key Timelines • Nov 2004: World Report on Knowledge for Better Health produced for Mexico Ministerial Summit on Health Research • WHA2005: Mexico Summit resolutions on research • WHA 2007: request for WHO Strategy on Research for Health (completed and approved by WHA 2010) (Bamako, Nov 2008) • March 2009: WHO GPG decided WHR2012 will be on research • Nov, 2010:Draft 1 to DG • Jan, 2011: DG convenes Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) • March, 2011: Draft 2 to DG • May, 2011: Draft 3 completed, shared with regions, clusters • July 2011: SAP Meeting in Geneva • Oct 3, 2011: Draft 4to DG, regions, clusters • Oct 31, 2012: Deadline for comments on draft 4 • 2012: Final draft, review & editing, DG sign-off, production, launch
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