We congratulate the authors on their systematic review of conference equity in global health (1) and agree that this is a key step towards decolonising global health research. Their review identifies barriers and facilitators impacting attendance from low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs). The authors have identified many solutions to improve the equity of conferences but did not mention online conferences. These have rapidly become the norm during the COVID-19 pandemic and could offer a feasible solution. (2)
The global pandemic forced the Global Women’s Research Society (GLOW) society conference to go online for the first time and it had dramatic impacts on the reach of the conference. We have run the annual UK-based GLOW conferences in global reproductive, maternal and new-born health since 2012, with a typical attendance of 70-140. In 2020, however, the pandemic forced us to pivot to an online conference. We fundraised £25,700 to provide the online platform and recordings, allowing free attendance for anyone from around the world. As a result, over 1300 people from 70 countries registered, with up to 1076 live views at one time. This works out at just £20 per registrant. During 2 days of the conference, there were a total of 3347 views, with 546 of those from LMICs. Additionally, there have been nearly 500 views of the videos on the YouTube channel since the September conference. We estimate costs of over £1,000,000 if all registrants and presenters had attend...
We congratulate the authors on their systematic review of conference equity in global health (1) and agree that this is a key step towards decolonising global health research. Their review identifies barriers and facilitators impacting attendance from low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs). The authors have identified many solutions to improve the equity of conferences but did not mention online conferences. These have rapidly become the norm during the COVID-19 pandemic and could offer a feasible solution. (2)
The global pandemic forced the Global Women’s Research Society (GLOW) society conference to go online for the first time and it had dramatic impacts on the reach of the conference. We have run the annual UK-based GLOW conferences in global reproductive, maternal and new-born health since 2012, with a typical attendance of 70-140. In 2020, however, the pandemic forced us to pivot to an online conference. We fundraised £25,700 to provide the online platform and recordings, allowing free attendance for anyone from around the world. As a result, over 1300 people from 70 countries registered, with up to 1076 live views at one time. This works out at just £20 per registrant. During 2 days of the conference, there were a total of 3347 views, with 546 of those from LMICs. Additionally, there have been nearly 500 views of the videos on the YouTube channel since the September conference. We estimate costs of over £1,000,000 if all registrants and presenters had attended in person. This works out at nearly £800 per person, or more if attendance is lower. Further details will be reported in a separate publication.
Feedback from 226 attendees clearly demonstrated that the online format overcame several barriers presented in this review. 83% rated the conference as very good or outstanding. Attendees’ feedback highlighted the benefits of no visa, travel and subsistence costs. It is likely that political barriers and unconscious bias inhibiting attendance and engagement may have also been reduced.
Nevertheless, there are several ongoing concerns with the virtual format. These include poor internet access and unstable connections, technological challenges, co-ordination across time zones and underdeveloped conference platforms and tools. Additionally, virtual conferences cannot offer the same networking opportunities, informal feedback and opportunities for focused attention for the entire event. (3)
We believe that online conferences or hybrid events offer one solution to reducing conference inequity. This requires purposeful action from conference organisers and funders to increase accessibility to those in LMICs. Further comprehensive evaluation of the impact of the virtual format, aimed at exploring whether this format reduces conference inequity, is required.
1. Velin L, Lartigue J-W, Johnson SA, et al. Conference equity in global health: a systematic review of factors impacting LMIC representation at global health conferences. BMJ Global Health 2021;6(1):e003455. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003455
2. Sarabipour S. Virtual conferences raise standards for accessibility and interactions. Elife 2020;9 doi: 10.7554/eLife.62668 [published Online First: 2020/11/05]
3. Falk MT, Hagsten E. When international academic conferences go virtual. Scientometrics 2020:1-18. doi: 10.1007/s11192-020-03754-5 [published Online First: 2020/11/25]
We read the commentary by Rahi, M. et al., with great interest, about the need of digitisation of malaria surveillance data and its integration on a single digital platform for malaria elimination in India1. There is no doubt that digitisation of malaria surveillance tools and data will help patients, clinician, researchers, policy makers alike and ultimately may contribute in malaria elimination, if implemented timely and efficiently. However, the proposition of digital dashboard for collection, integration and sharing of data on malaria, though important, but seems a little far-fetched conjecture at this moment as majority of malaria cases are reported from rural/tribal areas with sparsely distributed health care and telecommunication infrastructure. The top ten tribal dominated states with a population of 36 % contribute about 73 % of total malaria cases2. The strength of healthcare workforce is poor in rural/tribal areas of India in comparison to the WHO minimum threshold of 22.8 per 10 000 population3. Further, there is strong need to strengthen the power (electricity), telecommunication and transport infrastructure in rural/tribal areas. Such healthcare environment in tribal areas increases the reluctance among tribal people for the public health care system and leads them towards quacks, traditional healers and nearby private practitioners. Further, this digital drive of healthcare system would require additional human resource, periodical training and digital infr...
We read the commentary by Rahi, M. et al., with great interest, about the need of digitisation of malaria surveillance data and its integration on a single digital platform for malaria elimination in India1. There is no doubt that digitisation of malaria surveillance tools and data will help patients, clinician, researchers, policy makers alike and ultimately may contribute in malaria elimination, if implemented timely and efficiently. However, the proposition of digital dashboard for collection, integration and sharing of data on malaria, though important, but seems a little far-fetched conjecture at this moment as majority of malaria cases are reported from rural/tribal areas with sparsely distributed health care and telecommunication infrastructure. The top ten tribal dominated states with a population of 36 % contribute about 73 % of total malaria cases2. The strength of healthcare workforce is poor in rural/tribal areas of India in comparison to the WHO minimum threshold of 22.8 per 10 000 population3. Further, there is strong need to strengthen the power (electricity), telecommunication and transport infrastructure in rural/tribal areas. Such healthcare environment in tribal areas increases the reluctance among tribal people for the public health care system and leads them towards quacks, traditional healers and nearby private practitioners. Further, this digital drive of healthcare system would require additional human resource, periodical training and digital infrastructure. The Govt. of India has recently proposed the idea of national digital health mission and is planning to digitise the public health system4. Digital Malaria dash board35 may be a part of it. However, regular collection of minimal data set at local level may suffer from the same ailments as paper trail method until unless trained human resource with proper tools are not deputed. The incentive-based involvement of ASHA and local millennials laced with smartphone (as malaria ambassador) based surveillance tools may prove useful in getting high resolution geotagged data. Further, ASHA may serve as a link among quacks, traditional healer and private practitioner for data collection on notification. However, poor telecom infrastructure and tele-density in tribal areas is a matter of concern. Though the tele-density and number of smartphone owner is growing in tribal areas yet there are villages in malaria endemic regions which are difficult to access and where there is no telecommunication network. Therefore, getting high resolution data at the household/village level may be very difficult in tribal areas without the development of telecom infrastructure. Further, the expansion of telecom infrastructure will help in getting the data in real-time and at regular intervals. In toto, the development of digital dashboard for malaria and digitization of healthcare services will definitely improve service delivery; however, its sustainability is linked with development of basic infrastructure in malaria endemic tribal areas.
References
1. Rahi M, Sharma A. For malaria elimination India needs a platform for data integration. BMJ Glob Health 2020;5(12) doi: bmjgh-2020-004198 [pii] 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-004198 [published Online First: 2021/01/01]
2. https://nvbdcp.gov.in/WriteReadData/l892s/63783729891610104793.pdf (accessed on 08/02/210
3. Karan A, Negandhi H, Nair R, et al. Size, composition and distribution of human resource for health in India: new estimates using National Sample Survey and Registry data. BMJ Open 2019;9(4):e025979. doi: bmjopen-2018-025979 [pii] 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025979 [published Online First: 2019/05/28]
4. https://www.nhp.gov.in/national-digital-health-mission-(ndhm)_pg(accessed on 08/02/210
5. Nema S, Verma AK, Tiwari A, et al. Digital Health Care Services to Control and Eliminate Malaria in India. Trends Parasitol 2021;37(2):96-99. doi: S1471-4922(20)30315-9 [pii] 10.1016/j.pt.2020.11.002 [published Online First: 2020/12/03]
Many thanks to Dominic Pimenta for the interesting comment. I respect Pimenta’s well-intentioned activism during the COVID-19 crisis, but here he polarizes the discussion between two schools of thought by using a strawman argument, i.e. that one of the two schools wants to promote high community transmission. Such strawman arguments are prevalent in social media and the blogosphere, but they do not serve scientific discourse for resolution of major questions. I have signed neither the Great Barrington Declaration nor the John Snow Memorandum, so I cannot become an insider apologist for either (1). However, my reading of both documents suggests that neither of them advocates to promote high community transmission. If they do, this is certainly not what I would personally advocate.
Pimenta draws a correlation from 10 observations on the data that I present on nursing home shielding factors (my Table 3) reaching the conclusion that precision shielding is impossible under high community transmission. This is a precarious exercise with rushed conclusions. These are ecological, whole-country data including only 4 observations with high community transmission. Drawing firm causal inferences from an ecological regression with effective sample size of n=4 is impossible. Sadly, over-confident, stretched causal inferences are common during the COVID-19 crisis. A similar look at the age-stratified data on Table 2 shows that shielding of the elderly was achieved in countries w...
Many thanks to Dominic Pimenta for the interesting comment. I respect Pimenta’s well-intentioned activism during the COVID-19 crisis, but here he polarizes the discussion between two schools of thought by using a strawman argument, i.e. that one of the two schools wants to promote high community transmission. Such strawman arguments are prevalent in social media and the blogosphere, but they do not serve scientific discourse for resolution of major questions. I have signed neither the Great Barrington Declaration nor the John Snow Memorandum, so I cannot become an insider apologist for either (1). However, my reading of both documents suggests that neither of them advocates to promote high community transmission. If they do, this is certainly not what I would personally advocate.
Pimenta draws a correlation from 10 observations on the data that I present on nursing home shielding factors (my Table 3) reaching the conclusion that precision shielding is impossible under high community transmission. This is a precarious exercise with rushed conclusions. These are ecological, whole-country data including only 4 observations with high community transmission. Drawing firm causal inferences from an ecological regression with effective sample size of n=4 is impossible. Sadly, over-confident, stretched causal inferences are common during the COVID-19 crisis. A similar look at the age-stratified data on Table 2 shows that shielding of the elderly was achieved in countries with high community transmission (e.g. UK and USA), while it was probably not achieved in Hungary, despite low community transmission. China exemplifies significant inverse protection, even though it managed to practically bring community transmission to almost zero.
For the 4 countries with high S values in nursing homes and high community transmission (Spain, UK, Belgium, and Sweden), there are many other explanations for high S values, as I explain in my article. With limited testing of staff, suboptimal infection control, poor living conditions, and with staff making shifts across multiple nursing homes, disaster is expected. Not only nursing home residents, but also their staff should be handled as high-risk individuals. Unfortunately, the opposite happened, perhaps because of flawed over-confidence that general population measures would suffice. Rational efforts to reduce community transmission are most welcome, provided that they do not do more harm on several other aspects of health and societal well-being (2). However, it is naïve to expect that simply taking community measures will salvage nursing homes without additional, draconian, focused measures. To use an analogy, when a known serial murderer has declared his clear intention to kill someone, the specific candidate victim should be immediately, actively, specifically protected. Dispatching more policemen at random locations around the country or preaching to a community congregation to love each other will not save his life.
John P.A. Ioannidis, MD, DSc
Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA. E-mail: jioannid@stanford.edu
1. Ioannidis JP. Scientific petitions and open letters in the era of covid-19. BMJ. 2020 Oct 26;371:m4048.
2. Ioannidis JPA. Global perspective of COVID-19 epidemiology for a full-cycle pandemic. Eur J Clin Invest. 2020 Oct 7:e13423.
We read with interest the article ‘How global is global health Research? A large-scale analysis of tends in authorship’ by Dimitris and colleagues published in BMJ Global Health January 2021.1 The authors’ research highlights the slow progress in proportion of studies with any, first, and, last authors affiliated with a low- or middle-income country (LMICs), particularly in first and last authorship. The authors welcome and have called for a thorough discussion about the implications of these findings, particularly in identifying the barriers and facilitators to diversity in authorship.
Reflecting on our experience of international research in infectious diseases and antimicrobial resistance we present here some of the barriers we have faced together with the solutions which we have identified. Recognising however, that addressing this inequity requires broader inclusion and participation from academic institutions, scientific journals and funders, we propose remedial steps at every level which will require a different approach to scientific research funding and communication.
There is a culture and hierarchy within academia which manifests itself in the authorship order. It is accepted that the first leads the writing and last author leads the research with all authors contributing to the final manuscript. There are of course the guidelines from the International Committee of medical Journal Editors which clearly stipulate the rol...
We read with interest the article ‘How global is global health Research? A large-scale analysis of tends in authorship’ by Dimitris and colleagues published in BMJ Global Health January 2021.1 The authors’ research highlights the slow progress in proportion of studies with any, first, and, last authors affiliated with a low- or middle-income country (LMICs), particularly in first and last authorship. The authors welcome and have called for a thorough discussion about the implications of these findings, particularly in identifying the barriers and facilitators to diversity in authorship.
Reflecting on our experience of international research in infectious diseases and antimicrobial resistance we present here some of the barriers we have faced together with the solutions which we have identified. Recognising however, that addressing this inequity requires broader inclusion and participation from academic institutions, scientific journals and funders, we propose remedial steps at every level which will require a different approach to scientific research funding and communication.
There is a culture and hierarchy within academia which manifests itself in the authorship order. It is accepted that the first leads the writing and last author leads the research with all authors contributing to the final manuscript. There are of course the guidelines from the International Committee of medical Journal Editors which clearly stipulate the roles of authors and contributors.2 Writing manuscripts requires not only the skills to undertake research but to communicate it. Barriers to inclusion of LMICs first and last authors often is due to the inexperience of junior researchers writing research to a standard that is accepted by mainstream scientific journals, the majority of which are in English. Hence, writing scientific literature requires not only expertise in research but also in English. In collaborative, international research projects it is imperative to enable space for growth, learning and capacity building within country, and move away from the culture of well-funded high income research institutes dispatching researchers to LMICs to conduct research, leaving little opportunity for knowledge exchange and development. To do this effectively capacity building must be core to research collaborations, including investment in workforce and training.3 We have found success in developing mentorship programmes in our research collaborations which ensure that researchers are employed locally and trained by the extended research team. The mentorship has included supporting junior researchers to participate in writing research papers and have the opportunity to be first authors on work that they have driven locally. This has meant a conscious effort to consistently scrutinise and evaluate the equity and balance in representation in every piece of work that is submitted. As a rule of thumb a baseline expectation should be to ensure that one of either first or last authorship is assigned to LMICs partners for work being carried out in or in collaboration with LMICs. This means that from the outset there are clear expectations on work from each partner and decisions about authorship are not left to the last minute. This approach also clarifies the level of involvement and work that each person in the research team has to contribute to be acknowledged as an author. To do this effectively and sustainably there has to be capacity building in place to ensure that knowledge and skills are developed alongside data gathering and analysis (Figure 1).
Figure 1 The steps required to address barrier to and facilitate equity in authorship of global health research
Another barrier which is increasingly more difficult to address is the costs of publication and unfamiliarity with the submission process, which means that much of the world is not equitably represented in academic publishing. Additionally, the current predominantly anonymised peer review process limits the learning potential from the academic peer review dialogue that often helps transform manuscripts into published articles. Publication costs are an enormous barrier, particularly in LMICs where institutions often do not benefit from the block funding available to many high-income academic institutions to cover costs of publication for their researchers. What this means that occasionally the LMICs researchers have to rely on out-of-pocket expenses which range between £1200 to over £2000 for open access publishing. As we write this letter, we are in the process of trying to reverse one such cost inflicted on colleagues who were invited to submit research undertaken in Uganda. The solution to this lies in part with scientific journals, academic institutions, and funders. Scientific journals need to have clear policies for submitted research from LMICs where there is no institutional support for open access funding, with reduced LMICs fees and options for waiving publication fees from researchers who do not have grant funding or institutional support. Reviewers and editors need to call out academic manuscripts which do not have equitable representation of authors from countries where the research is conducted, and question submitting authors on this. Academic institutions in high income countries need to relax their rules around funding research articles for publications where the first, last, and/or corresponding author is not from their institution. Funders should stipulate a condition of their grant to be that for research that involves LMICs partners the authorship should be equitable and balanced in first, last, and corresponding authorship. Furthermore, they need to recognise that capacity building and research communication costs need to be adequately detailed and costed in international grant applications and be part of the monitoring and evaluation process.
Only when the need for equitable funding is recognised at all these levels, can we address the current disparities in representation in research from LMICs partners.
References
1. Dimitris MC, Gittings M, King N. How global is global health Research? A large-scale analysis of tends in authorship. BMJ Global Health 2021;6:e003758.
2. International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. Defining the role of Authors and Contributors. Website: http://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/roles-and-responsibilities/d... Date accessed: 05 February 2021
3. P Veepanattu, S Singh, M Mendelson, V Nampoothiri, F Edathadatil, S Surendran, C Bonaconsa, O Mbamalu, S Ahuja, G Birgand, C Tarrant, N Sevdalis, R Ahmad, A Holmes, E Charani. Building resilient and responsive research collaborations to tackle antimicrobial resistance – lessons learnt from India, South Africa and UK. Int J of Infect Dis 2020;100:278-282.
The article is predicated on the notion that “The ability to preferentially protect high-risk groups in COVID-19 is hotly debated.” This is a mischaracterisation of the debate. The ability to protect high-risk groups has never been questioned.
The debate would be better characterised as the ability to focus non-pharmaceutical interventions solely on those most at risk of severe disease due to COVID-19, and removing restrictions and allowing widespread infection amongst the low risk groups. The debate has only ever been between those who advocated only applying NPIs to the highest risk cohorts ("focussed protection") and those that advocate that community wide measures are the only effective means to protect those at highest risk.
The stated aim of this paper is to demonstrate whether ‘precision shielding’ was achieved in the first wave, and invents a metric to compare incidence and death in the high risk long-term care population vs the low risk younger population. The author uses seroprevalence data from the elderly and the young to estimate infection prevalence, but takes no account of the differing antibody response that would largely confound this approach.
Using these metrics the author then goes on to ascribe a value judgement as “substantial shielding” or “substantial inverse protection.” Care homes and institutions are already known to be at risk environments for the spread of infectious disease, due to the close contact care work, the m...
The article is predicated on the notion that “The ability to preferentially protect high-risk groups in COVID-19 is hotly debated.” This is a mischaracterisation of the debate. The ability to protect high-risk groups has never been questioned.
The debate would be better characterised as the ability to focus non-pharmaceutical interventions solely on those most at risk of severe disease due to COVID-19, and removing restrictions and allowing widespread infection amongst the low risk groups. The debate has only ever been between those who advocated only applying NPIs to the highest risk cohorts ("focussed protection") and those that advocate that community wide measures are the only effective means to protect those at highest risk.
The stated aim of this paper is to demonstrate whether ‘precision shielding’ was achieved in the first wave, and invents a metric to compare incidence and death in the high risk long-term care population vs the low risk younger population. The author uses seroprevalence data from the elderly and the young to estimate infection prevalence, but takes no account of the differing antibody response that would largely confound this approach.
Using these metrics the author then goes on to ascribe a value judgement as “substantial shielding” or “substantial inverse protection.” Care homes and institutions are already known to be at risk environments for the spread of infectious disease, due to the close contact care work, the multiple staff per patient, and the vulnerability and general immobility of the patient population as a whole. Terming this as “inverse protection” adds very little clarity to this area.
On the basis of this analysis the author concludes 'precision shielding' is possible in 'real-life circumstances' but takes no account of the community-wide transmission which is the actual focus of the debate, and the basis for the statement that this approach is not feasible in reality. When correlated with the cumulative cases/million by the end of the first wave (ourworldindata.org) the shielding metric the author lays out for these 10 countries shows a very strong correlation: (Rsq of 0.82), showing that in the presence of high community transmission, 'precision shielding' isn't possible, while very effective community-wide suppression, such as in South Korea, made this much more feasible. An effective argument, amongst many others including economic impact, ethical considerations, multi-generational families, unknown risk in the community and long-term COVID morbidity, why 'focussed protection' or 'precision shielding' is unfeasible in the real-world.
I congratulate the authors who successfully conducted a survey on the current provision of global health education (GHE) in United Kingdom (UK) medical schools.1 Their findings are in keeping with a recent cross-sectional study into the timetables of UK medical schools.2 In the methods section of the paper, the global health learning outcomes and competencies surveyed were listed. However, global surgery was neither surveyed nor discussed in this paper.
This occurred despite global surgery being added as a mandatory learning objective to the national undergraduate curriculum in surgery by the Royal College of England in 2015.3 Post 2015, GHE studies2 and study protocols4 have typically strived to ensure that global surgery is assessed within their study designs. This is particularly important as global surgery often becomes the ‘neglected stepchild of global health’.5 It is easy to see why given that approximately two-thirds of UK medical courses are reported not to cover this topic within their core curriculum.2 It is not in the best interests of the population for a subject of such importance to be ignored by global health researchers and educational institutions.
Therefore, whilst it is encouraging that a study has been done with the aim of identifying gaps in GHE teaching in UK medical schools, the study design in and of itself has resulted in the researchers missing gaps.2 This exemplifies the importance of having a diverse range of stakeholders involve...
I congratulate the authors who successfully conducted a survey on the current provision of global health education (GHE) in United Kingdom (UK) medical schools.1 Their findings are in keeping with a recent cross-sectional study into the timetables of UK medical schools.2 In the methods section of the paper, the global health learning outcomes and competencies surveyed were listed. However, global surgery was neither surveyed nor discussed in this paper.
This occurred despite global surgery being added as a mandatory learning objective to the national undergraduate curriculum in surgery by the Royal College of England in 2015.3 Post 2015, GHE studies2 and study protocols4 have typically strived to ensure that global surgery is assessed within their study designs. This is particularly important as global surgery often becomes the ‘neglected stepchild of global health’.5 It is easy to see why given that approximately two-thirds of UK medical courses are reported not to cover this topic within their core curriculum.2 It is not in the best interests of the population for a subject of such importance to be ignored by global health researchers and educational institutions.
Therefore, whilst it is encouraging that a study has been done with the aim of identifying gaps in GHE teaching in UK medical schools, the study design in and of itself has resulted in the researchers missing gaps.2 This exemplifies the importance of having a diverse range of stakeholders involved in GHE study designs. A more diverse panel of authors or a more complete patient and public involvement stage could have ensured the inclusion of global surgery into the survey or at least into the discussion section of this paper. For global surgery to truly get the attention it needs, it is critical that it features in global health research, particularly in studies such as this.
There now exists a need to conduct a survey study to better understand the perceived status of global surgery teaching within the UK medical curricula. This survey should evaluate whether medical students are exposed to global surgery during medical school, how they are exposed to global surgery, and whether the types of exposures meet the needs of students. It is equally essential to collect data on the opinions shaped by this experience; therefore, career aspirations and perceived barriers to joining the global surgery workforce must be elucidated also.
References
1 Matthews NR, Davies B, Ward H. Global health education in UK medical schools: a review of undergraduate university curricula. BMJ Glob Heal 2020; 5: e002801.
2 Collaborative IU. Global health education in medical schools (GHEMS): a national, collaborative study of medical curricula. BMC Med Educ 2020; 20: 389.
3 The Royal College of Surgeons England, (RCSENG). National undergraduate curriculum in surgery 2015. RCSENG – Prof Stand Regul 2015.
4 Bandyopadhyay S, Shortland T, Wadanamby SW, et al. Global Health Education in UK Medical Schools (GHEMS) study protocol. J Glob Heal Reports 2019; 3. DOI:10.29392/joghr.3.e2019052.
5 Farmer PE, Kim JY. Surgery and global health: A view from beyond the OR. World J. Surg. 2008; 32: 533–6.
Introduction and Brief Overview
The Global Health Security (GHS) Index is the first comprehensive assessment and benchmarking of health security and related capabilities across the 195 countries that make up the States Parties to the International Health Regulations (IHR [2005])1. The GHS Index takes into account countries’ capability to prevent, detect, and respond to public health emergencies while also assessing the robustness of the healthcare system in each country. This index is comprehensive since it has the ability to consider political and socioeconomic risks, as well as adherence to international norms, which can influence countries’ abilities to stop outbreaks1,2. The GHS Index has been the creation of Open Philanthropy Project, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Robertson Foundation1.
The GHS Index treats biosafety and biosecurity as critical components of global health security. As such, the tool includes numerous indicators measuring country capacities and accounts for differences in priorities between high income and low/middle income countries. The GHS index is based on 6 categories, 34 indicators, and 85 sub-indicators. The six categories comprise prevention, detection and reporting, rapid response, health system, compliance with international norms, and risk environment5.
This article describes the practical value of the GHS Index and also explains how the methodology of assigning country ranks and scores is helpful in aidin...
Introduction and Brief Overview
The Global Health Security (GHS) Index is the first comprehensive assessment and benchmarking of health security and related capabilities across the 195 countries that make up the States Parties to the International Health Regulations (IHR [2005])1. The GHS Index takes into account countries’ capability to prevent, detect, and respond to public health emergencies while also assessing the robustness of the healthcare system in each country. This index is comprehensive since it has the ability to consider political and socioeconomic risks, as well as adherence to international norms, which can influence countries’ abilities to stop outbreaks1,2. The GHS Index has been the creation of Open Philanthropy Project, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Robertson Foundation1.
The GHS Index treats biosafety and biosecurity as critical components of global health security. As such, the tool includes numerous indicators measuring country capacities and accounts for differences in priorities between high income and low/middle income countries. The GHS index is based on 6 categories, 34 indicators, and 85 sub-indicators. The six categories comprise prevention, detection and reporting, rapid response, health system, compliance with international norms, and risk environment5.
This article describes the practical value of the GHS Index and also explains how the methodology of assigning country ranks and scores is helpful in aiding decision making for different countries on their health system preparedness. This concept is especially very timely in the current COVID-19 pandemic in measuring global health security capacities and pointing out areas for improvement. The main learning from the GHS index is that national health security is fundamentally weak around the world. The average GHS Index score among all 195 countries was 40.2 of a possible score of 100.
Methodology
The GHS tool is effectively building on the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Joint External Evaluation (JEE) which results from a collaboration that countries can volunteer to undertake to assess their compliance with the standards that have been agreed upon by the international community. The intuitive technique of scoring and ranking is used for summarizing complex health system capacities across diverse contexts3,4.
Critique/Commentary
Due to the way the tool is structured, GHS Index may be prone to misinterpretation as a forecasting tool which it clearly is not. It is in fact a snapshot in time of a country’s preparedness in tackling infectious disease outbreaks given the prevailing socio economic and political conditions. It would have been fascinating to see Andersen’s Model of Healthcare Utilization being used in the development of this index since it encompasses predisposing, enabling and need factors driving healthcare resource use. Many commonly used indicators of health security capacity like GHS Index are somewhat a rigid framework of outbreak prevention, detection and response. This framing likely fails to account for socio- cultural determinants of health and broader aspects of population health management which are parts of Andersen Model of Healthcare Utilization. The overall GHS index scores summarize country capacities across all categories. However, countries with high overall scores may still have low category-level, indicator-level and sub-indicator- level scores that more strongly influence outbreak-associated outcomes. A startling inconsistency observed was the United States (US), United Kingdom (UK), Netherlands, Australia, and Canada ranked in the top 5 countries on the GHS index. However, the top 5 countries as ranked by the GHS index are among the worst-hit countries by COVID-19, with a high number of cases and mortalities6. What would make the GHS index more comprehensive is some more focus on access to healthcare as even in the US one of the key drivers of health inequity is disparity in access. Based on the way COVID-19 has been handled in an inept manner across the world, there should be more learnings around factors affecting decision making that led to this crisis so that we can be more prepared to handle the next pandemic or global disaster. Besides the metrics in the GHS index it looks like political leadership is the most decisive factor in determining success in dealing with epidemics. Based on other background reading it appears that the GHS index expert panel did not directly engage authorities responsible for emergency preparedness in their respective countries and other key stakeholders. Instead, the panel evaluated information provided by each country which caused methodology to be biased and obscured crucial weaknesses in a country's capacity to confront outbreaks. Thus the GHS index is a good start but needs incorporation of more public health measurement factors and political leadership as a factor to make it more representative and possible a predictive tool for future pandemics.
Reference
1. Ravi SJ, Warmbrod KL, Mullen L, et al. The value proposition of the Global Health Security Index. BMJ Global Health 2020;5:e003648. doi:10.1136/ bmjgh-2020-003648
2. Cameron E, Nuzzo J, Bell J, et al. Global health security index:building collective action and accountability, 2019. Available: https://www. ghsindex. org/ wp- content/ uploads/ 2020/ 04/ 2019- Global-Health- Security- Index. Pdf
3. Peters DH, Noor AA, Singh LP, et al. A balanced scorecard for health services in Afghanistan. Bull World Health Organ 2007;85:146–51.
4. Munda G, Nardo M. On the methodological foundations of composite indicators used for ranking countries. Barcelona, Spain Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, European Commission; 2003. https:// pdfs. semanticscholar. org/ f308/ aae4 26de ca90 aa7e 0929 9561 bcfe 10e129b0. Pdf
5. 2019 Global Health Security Index. 324.
6. COVID-19 Map. Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center. Accessed May 31, 2020. https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html
We have read this excellent article with interest. As physicians based in Pakistan: a low-middle income country and not having English as our first language, we could relate to the challenges mentioned in this manuscript. Authors have very rightly pointed out that the issue with most of the researchers based in the low-income (LIC) and middle-income countries (LMIC) is not of poor or low-quality science. We need data and experience sharing from all parts of the world in order to complete the bigger picture and understand the issues that we face today in health, environment, and social sciences. One of the main challenges authors based in the LIC and LMIC face is the issue of presentation of that data i a presentable form. Due to the lack of training opportunities, many authors are unable to write manuscripts that meet the high standards of global scientific journals. This deprives these authors of an opportunity to publish in journals with a global audience and the world misses out on reading a different perspective from the LIC or LMIC. In this context, the introduction of PREPSS is an excellent and welcome initiative that must be supported and promoted.
In this context, we would like to highlight the role of AuthorAID: a global platform of more than 17,000 researchers from all around the globe. We have been extensively using this platform for more than a decade to learn and now collaborate and teach other researchers based in the LIC and LMIC. AuthorAID also pr...
We have read this excellent article with interest. As physicians based in Pakistan: a low-middle income country and not having English as our first language, we could relate to the challenges mentioned in this manuscript. Authors have very rightly pointed out that the issue with most of the researchers based in the low-income (LIC) and middle-income countries (LMIC) is not of poor or low-quality science. We need data and experience sharing from all parts of the world in order to complete the bigger picture and understand the issues that we face today in health, environment, and social sciences. One of the main challenges authors based in the LIC and LMIC face is the issue of presentation of that data i a presentable form. Due to the lack of training opportunities, many authors are unable to write manuscripts that meet the high standards of global scientific journals. This deprives these authors of an opportunity to publish in journals with a global audience and the world misses out on reading a different perspective from the LIC or LMIC. In this context, the introduction of PREPSS is an excellent and welcome initiative that must be supported and promoted.
In this context, we would like to highlight the role of AuthorAID: a global platform of more than 17,000 researchers from all around the globe. We have been extensively using this platform for more than a decade to learn and now collaborate and teach other researchers based in the LIC and LMIC. AuthorAID also provides services related to the process of conducting, analyzing, and reporting research. However, the model of AuthorAID is different from the PREPSS. AuthorAID provides a platform for mutual collaboration among researchers based in different parts of the world by connecting them as mentors and mentees. The process entails free registration on the website and completing the profile including details of the collaboration and help one is seeking. The mentee has to identify the mentor from the list available and send a request for mentorship. Once the request is accepted, a formal online agreement has to be signed by both parties. The agreement clearly spells out the nature of the help requested ( formulating the research question, assistance with data analysis, help with the writing process, choosing a target journal, and responding to peer reviewers' comments) , time lines, mode, and frequency of communication planned.
We both have benefited immensely from the free services, resources and online courses offered by AuthorAID and now have progressed from mentees to mentors helping others.
The world has become a global stage open to all. It is very encouraging to see initiatives like PREPSS and AuthorAID which are primarily meant fro the authors and researchers based in the LIC and LMIC. These platforms not only foster global collaboration, create long-term professionals networks but also help researchers based in developing countries to share their rich experiences and publish in international journals with a global readership. This makes the world a better place
In relation to SAM terminology. No one could argue with the logic of acute v chronic. However, SAM is well understood at a policy level. It is however understood at above six months. The work that ENN and MAMI have done on identifying wasting at birth is a narrative change which can lay the foundation for the bridging language that the paper talks about.
Narrative is a story that people can understand.
As pointed out, consistency is important, but consistency must hover across the 1000 day window. Currently, our terminology for narrating fetal undernutrition is very weak. While simplistic, if children are being born wasted, then they are also wasted in utero. To fully open the curtains, we would suggest that the SAM terminology be adapted to include fetal malnutrition. The narrative neither stops nor begins at birth regardless of the terminology we use.
In relation to the false positives and visa versa. Given current programming capacity and coverage rates well below 20% for CMAM false negatives represent only a tiny fraction of those who need treatment and do not receive it. Focus on false positives takes away from the substantive issue of low coverage rates for Essential Nutrition Actions across the 1000 day window.
On a broader theme, it would be helpful to explore how the food system and the food system summit support people in immediate need.
A conversation starter
The food system belongs to...
In relation to SAM terminology. No one could argue with the logic of acute v chronic. However, SAM is well understood at a policy level. It is however understood at above six months. The work that ENN and MAMI have done on identifying wasting at birth is a narrative change which can lay the foundation for the bridging language that the paper talks about.
Narrative is a story that people can understand.
As pointed out, consistency is important, but consistency must hover across the 1000 day window. Currently, our terminology for narrating fetal undernutrition is very weak. While simplistic, if children are being born wasted, then they are also wasted in utero. To fully open the curtains, we would suggest that the SAM terminology be adapted to include fetal malnutrition. The narrative neither stops nor begins at birth regardless of the terminology we use.
In relation to the false positives and visa versa. Given current programming capacity and coverage rates well below 20% for CMAM false negatives represent only a tiny fraction of those who need treatment and do not receive it. Focus on false positives takes away from the substantive issue of low coverage rates for Essential Nutrition Actions across the 1000 day window.
On a broader theme, it would be helpful to explore how the food system and the food system summit support people in immediate need.
A conversation starter
The food system belongs to every one of us. The Food System and so the Food Systems Summit, at its cornerstone must aspire to meet all peoples immediate nutritional needs every day.
We congratulate the authors on their systematic review of conference equity in global health (1) and agree that this is a key step towards decolonising global health research. Their review identifies barriers and facilitators impacting attendance from low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs). The authors have identified many solutions to improve the equity of conferences but did not mention online conferences. These have rapidly become the norm during the COVID-19 pandemic and could offer a feasible solution. (2)
The global pandemic forced the Global Women’s Research Society (GLOW) society conference to go online for the first time and it had dramatic impacts on the reach of the conference. We have run the annual UK-based GLOW conferences in global reproductive, maternal and new-born health since 2012, with a typical attendance of 70-140. In 2020, however, the pandemic forced us to pivot to an online conference. We fundraised £25,700 to provide the online platform and recordings, allowing free attendance for anyone from around the world. As a result, over 1300 people from 70 countries registered, with up to 1076 live views at one time. This works out at just £20 per registrant. During 2 days of the conference, there were a total of 3347 views, with 546 of those from LMICs. Additionally, there have been nearly 500 views of the videos on the YouTube channel since the September conference. We estimate costs of over £1,000,000 if all registrants and presenters had attend...
Show MoreWe read the commentary by Rahi, M. et al., with great interest, about the need of digitisation of malaria surveillance data and its integration on a single digital platform for malaria elimination in India1. There is no doubt that digitisation of malaria surveillance tools and data will help patients, clinician, researchers, policy makers alike and ultimately may contribute in malaria elimination, if implemented timely and efficiently. However, the proposition of digital dashboard for collection, integration and sharing of data on malaria, though important, but seems a little far-fetched conjecture at this moment as majority of malaria cases are reported from rural/tribal areas with sparsely distributed health care and telecommunication infrastructure. The top ten tribal dominated states with a population of 36 % contribute about 73 % of total malaria cases2. The strength of healthcare workforce is poor in rural/tribal areas of India in comparison to the WHO minimum threshold of 22.8 per 10 000 population3. Further, there is strong need to strengthen the power (electricity), telecommunication and transport infrastructure in rural/tribal areas. Such healthcare environment in tribal areas increases the reluctance among tribal people for the public health care system and leads them towards quacks, traditional healers and nearby private practitioners. Further, this digital drive of healthcare system would require additional human resource, periodical training and digital infr...
Show MoreMany thanks to Dominic Pimenta for the interesting comment. I respect Pimenta’s well-intentioned activism during the COVID-19 crisis, but here he polarizes the discussion between two schools of thought by using a strawman argument, i.e. that one of the two schools wants to promote high community transmission. Such strawman arguments are prevalent in social media and the blogosphere, but they do not serve scientific discourse for resolution of major questions. I have signed neither the Great Barrington Declaration nor the John Snow Memorandum, so I cannot become an insider apologist for either (1). However, my reading of both documents suggests that neither of them advocates to promote high community transmission. If they do, this is certainly not what I would personally advocate.
Pimenta draws a correlation from 10 observations on the data that I present on nursing home shielding factors (my Table 3) reaching the conclusion that precision shielding is impossible under high community transmission. This is a precarious exercise with rushed conclusions. These are ecological, whole-country data including only 4 observations with high community transmission. Drawing firm causal inferences from an ecological regression with effective sample size of n=4 is impossible. Sadly, over-confident, stretched causal inferences are common during the COVID-19 crisis. A similar look at the age-stratified data on Table 2 shows that shielding of the elderly was achieved in countries w...
Show MoreI don't think this research is particularly useful for policy analysis.
Any analysis of leader's age, marital status or whether they had children?
These are also likely to effect rhetoric.
The short time period of the analysis also casts doubts on the validity of the study and usefulness of any conclusions.
Dear Dr Abimbola,
We read with interest the article ‘How global is global health Research? A large-scale analysis of tends in authorship’ by Dimitris and colleagues published in BMJ Global Health January 2021.1 The authors’ research highlights the slow progress in proportion of studies with any, first, and, last authors affiliated with a low- or middle-income country (LMICs), particularly in first and last authorship. The authors welcome and have called for a thorough discussion about the implications of these findings, particularly in identifying the barriers and facilitators to diversity in authorship.
Reflecting on our experience of international research in infectious diseases and antimicrobial resistance we present here some of the barriers we have faced together with the solutions which we have identified. Recognising however, that addressing this inequity requires broader inclusion and participation from academic institutions, scientific journals and funders, we propose remedial steps at every level which will require a different approach to scientific research funding and communication.
There is a culture and hierarchy within academia which manifests itself in the authorship order. It is accepted that the first leads the writing and last author leads the research with all authors contributing to the final manuscript. There are of course the guidelines from the International Committee of medical Journal Editors which clearly stipulate the rol...
Show MoreThe article is predicated on the notion that “The ability to preferentially protect high-risk groups in COVID-19 is hotly debated.” This is a mischaracterisation of the debate. The ability to protect high-risk groups has never been questioned.
Show MoreThe debate would be better characterised as the ability to focus non-pharmaceutical interventions solely on those most at risk of severe disease due to COVID-19, and removing restrictions and allowing widespread infection amongst the low risk groups. The debate has only ever been between those who advocated only applying NPIs to the highest risk cohorts ("focussed protection") and those that advocate that community wide measures are the only effective means to protect those at highest risk.
The stated aim of this paper is to demonstrate whether ‘precision shielding’ was achieved in the first wave, and invents a metric to compare incidence and death in the high risk long-term care population vs the low risk younger population. The author uses seroprevalence data from the elderly and the young to estimate infection prevalence, but takes no account of the differing antibody response that would largely confound this approach.
Using these metrics the author then goes on to ascribe a value judgement as “substantial shielding” or “substantial inverse protection.” Care homes and institutions are already known to be at risk environments for the spread of infectious disease, due to the close contact care work, the m...
I congratulate the authors who successfully conducted a survey on the current provision of global health education (GHE) in United Kingdom (UK) medical schools.1 Their findings are in keeping with a recent cross-sectional study into the timetables of UK medical schools.2 In the methods section of the paper, the global health learning outcomes and competencies surveyed were listed. However, global surgery was neither surveyed nor discussed in this paper.
This occurred despite global surgery being added as a mandatory learning objective to the national undergraduate curriculum in surgery by the Royal College of England in 2015.3 Post 2015, GHE studies2 and study protocols4 have typically strived to ensure that global surgery is assessed within their study designs. This is particularly important as global surgery often becomes the ‘neglected stepchild of global health’.5 It is easy to see why given that approximately two-thirds of UK medical courses are reported not to cover this topic within their core curriculum.2 It is not in the best interests of the population for a subject of such importance to be ignored by global health researchers and educational institutions.
Therefore, whilst it is encouraging that a study has been done with the aim of identifying gaps in GHE teaching in UK medical schools, the study design in and of itself has resulted in the researchers missing gaps.2 This exemplifies the importance of having a diverse range of stakeholders involve...
Show MoreIntroduction and Brief Overview
Show MoreThe Global Health Security (GHS) Index is the first comprehensive assessment and benchmarking of health security and related capabilities across the 195 countries that make up the States Parties to the International Health Regulations (IHR [2005])1. The GHS Index takes into account countries’ capability to prevent, detect, and respond to public health emergencies while also assessing the robustness of the healthcare system in each country. This index is comprehensive since it has the ability to consider political and socioeconomic risks, as well as adherence to international norms, which can influence countries’ abilities to stop outbreaks1,2. The GHS Index has been the creation of Open Philanthropy Project, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Robertson Foundation1.
The GHS Index treats biosafety and biosecurity as critical components of global health security. As such, the tool includes numerous indicators measuring country capacities and accounts for differences in priorities between high income and low/middle income countries. The GHS index is based on 6 categories, 34 indicators, and 85 sub-indicators. The six categories comprise prevention, detection and reporting, rapid response, health system, compliance with international norms, and risk environment5.
This article describes the practical value of the GHS Index and also explains how the methodology of assigning country ranks and scores is helpful in aidin...
We have read this excellent article with interest. As physicians based in Pakistan: a low-middle income country and not having English as our first language, we could relate to the challenges mentioned in this manuscript. Authors have very rightly pointed out that the issue with most of the researchers based in the low-income (LIC) and middle-income countries (LMIC) is not of poor or low-quality science. We need data and experience sharing from all parts of the world in order to complete the bigger picture and understand the issues that we face today in health, environment, and social sciences. One of the main challenges authors based in the LIC and LMIC face is the issue of presentation of that data i a presentable form. Due to the lack of training opportunities, many authors are unable to write manuscripts that meet the high standards of global scientific journals. This deprives these authors of an opportunity to publish in journals with a global audience and the world misses out on reading a different perspective from the LIC or LMIC. In this context, the introduction of PREPSS is an excellent and welcome initiative that must be supported and promoted.
Show MoreIn this context, we would like to highlight the role of AuthorAID: a global platform of more than 17,000 researchers from all around the globe. We have been extensively using this platform for more than a decade to learn and now collaborate and teach other researchers based in the LIC and LMIC. AuthorAID also pr...
A few thoughts on the paper.
In relation to SAM terminology. No one could argue with the logic of acute v chronic. However, SAM is well understood at a policy level. It is however understood at above six months. The work that ENN and MAMI have done on identifying wasting at birth is a narrative change which can lay the foundation for the bridging language that the paper talks about.
Narrative is a story that people can understand.
As pointed out, consistency is important, but consistency must hover across the 1000 day window. Currently, our terminology for narrating fetal undernutrition is very weak. While simplistic, if children are being born wasted, then they are also wasted in utero. To fully open the curtains, we would suggest that the SAM terminology be adapted to include fetal malnutrition. The narrative neither stops nor begins at birth regardless of the terminology we use.
In relation to the false positives and visa versa. Given current programming capacity and coverage rates well below 20% for CMAM false negatives represent only a tiny fraction of those who need treatment and do not receive it. Focus on false positives takes away from the substantive issue of low coverage rates for Essential Nutrition Actions across the 1000 day window.
On a broader theme, it would be helpful to explore how the food system and the food system summit support people in immediate need.
A conversation starter
Show MoreThe food system belongs to...
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