Baseline results of a living systematic review for COVID-19 funded research projects

Alice Norton(University of Oxford), Adrian Bucher(UK Collaborative on Development Research), Emilia Antonio(University of Oxford), Nicole Advani(University of Oxford), Henrike Grund(UK Collaborative on Development Research), Sheila Mburu(UK Collaborative on Development Research), Emma Clegg(UK Collaborative on Development Research), Geneviève Boily-Larouche(Canadian Institutes of Health Research), A. Morgan Lay(Canadian Institutes of Health Research), Gail Carson(University of Oxford), Marta Tufet(UK Collaborative on Development Research)
Wellcome Open Research
September 8, 2020
Cited by 21Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has resulted in an unprecedented research response, demonstrating exceptional examples of rapid research and collaboration. There has however been an ongoing need for greater coordination, with limited resources for research and the shifting global pandemic. METHODS: The UK Collaborative on Development Research (UKCDR) and Global Research Collaboration for Infectious Disease Preparedness (GloPID-R), two funder coordination groups have collaborated to develop a live database of funded research projects across the world relating to COVID-19. Drawing data continually from their members and further global funding bodies, as of 15th October 2022 the database contains 20,006 projects, funded by 351 funders, taking place across 157 countries representing an investment of at least $7.4 billion. To our knowledge it is one of the most comprehensive databases. The database is aligned to the World Health Organisation and GloPID-R Global Research Roadmap: 2019 Novel Coronavirus and the UN Research Roadmap for the COVID-19 Recovery. It is being used by the WHO, governments and further policy makers, research funders and researchers. This living mapping review aims to supplement the database by providing an open, accessible, and frequently updated resource summarising the characteristics of the COVID-19 funded research portfolio. Both descriptive and thematic analyses are presented and updated frequently to aid interpretation of the global COVID-19 funded research portfolio. RESULTS: In this final version ten analysis, we provide an updated detailed descriptive analysis of the database (on data from three months after version nine) and focus our thematic analysis on research gaps, research areas in need of coordination, study populations, and research locations (with a focus on resource-limited countries). CONCLUSIONS: As the global research response to COVID-19 plateaus, this living mapping review has helped both funders and researchers to prioritise resources and review investments.


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