When the COVID-19 outbreak was declared, the global research community was forced to react rapidly and the danger of research duplication and multiple clinical trials addressing the same questions came to the fore.
Together, the UK Collaborative on Development Research (UKCDR) and the Global Research Collaboration for Infectious Disease Preparedness (GloPID-R) recognised this challenge and pulled together to create the COVID-19 Research Project Tracker to know what funding was going where and to get that information to those who needed to know.
The Tracker, now featuring more than 13,000 projects, formed part of our joint COVID CIRCLE initiative to facilitate global collaboration and maximise the impact of research, especially in low- and middle-income countries. Marie Staunton, Chair of the Strategic Coherence for ODA Research (SCOR) Board, and Charu Kaushic, GloPID-R Chair, reflect on this unique partnership and discuss lessons learned for future approaches to funding epidemics and pandemics.
Pulling together
Marie: During this pandemic, coordinating the urgent and global research response to meet the scale of research needs has been a real challenge. At UKCDR and GloPID-R we quickly understood if we pulled together to track research, we could achieve more.
Each of our organisations brought something different and complementary to the table.
Our team at UKCDR had the capacity and data skills to develop the Tracker. GloPID-R had the disciplinary expertise, reach and a network of global funders. This meant we were able to engage a wide range of countries and organisations to make sure this tool was put to good use.
Charu: Absolutely, this enabled us to provide a model of scaling a national response to a global one. We already knew that too little coordination on global implementation would lead to duplication.
We learnt that there is a real need for adaptability and clarity on who does what.
Marie: That’s right. Working together made us stronger. We were able to leverage our partnerships with funders and researchers in the field and to build a community around COVID CIRCLE and the Tracker and that rapidly improved the response to the crisis.
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