Title
Developing consensus measures for global programs: Lessons from the Global Alliance for Chronic Diseases Hypertension research program
Date Issued
15 March 2017
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Riddell M.A.
Edwards N.
Thompson S.R.
Praveen D.
Johnson C.
Kengne A.P.
Liu P.
McCready T.
Ng E.
Nieuwlaat R.
Ovbiagele B.
Owolabi M.
Peiris D.
Thrift A.G.
Tobe S.
Yusoff K.
de Villiers A.
He F.
MacGregor G.
Jan S.
Neal B.
Chow C.
Joshi R.
MacMahon S.
Patel A.
Rodgers A.
Webster R.
Keat N.K.
Attaran A.
Mills E.
Muldoon K.
Yaya S.
Featherstone A.
Mukasa B.
Forrest J.
Kalyesubula R.
Kamwesiga J.
Lopez P.C.
Tayari J.C.
Lopez P.
Casas J.L.
McKee M.
Zainal A.O.
Yusuf S.
Campbell N.
Kilonzo K.
Marr M.
Yeates K.
Feng X.
Yuan J.
Li X.
Lin C.P.
Yan L.
Zhang J.
Wu Y.
Ma J.
Wang H.
Ma Y.
Nowson C.
Moodie M.
Goudge J.
Kabudula C.
Limbani F.
Masilela N.
Myakayaka N.
Gómez-Olivé F.X.
Thorogood M.
Arabshahi S.
Evans R.
Mahal A.
Oldenburg B.
Riddell M.
Srikanth V.
Heritier S.
Kalyanram K.
Kartik K.
Suresh O.
Maulik P.
Salam A.
Sudhir T.
Thankappan K.
Thirunavukkarasu S.
Varma R.
Thomas N.
Clifford G.
Prabhakaran D.
Thom S.
Shivashankar R.
Mohan S.
Reddy K.S.
Krishnan A.
Faletoese S.
Ieremia M.
Ulberg C.
Viali S.
Pillay A.
Sukhu A.
Schultz J.
Siitia J.
Publisher(s)
BioMed Central Ltd.
Abstract
Background: The imperative to improve global health has prompted transnational research partnerships to investigate common health issues on a larger scale. The Global Alliance for Chronic Diseases (GACD) is an alliance of national research funding agencies. To enhance research funded by GACD members, this study aimed to standardise data collection methods across the 15 GACD hypertension research teams and evaluate the uptake of these standardised measurements. Furthermore we describe concerns and difficulties associated with the data harmonisation process highlighted and debated during annual meetings of the GACD funded investigators. With these concerns and issues in mind, a working group comprising representatives from the 15 studies iteratively identified and proposed a set of common measures for inclusion in each of the teams' data collection plans. One year later all teams were asked which consensus measures had been implemented. Results: Important issues were identified during the data harmonisation process relating to data ownership, sharing methodologies and ethical concerns. Measures were assessed across eight domains; demographic; dietary; clinical and anthropometric; medical history; hypertension knowledge; physical activity; behavioural (smoking and alcohol); and biochemical domains. Identifying validated measures relevant across a variety of settings presented some difficulties. The resulting GACD hypertension data dictionary comprises 67 consensus measures. Of the 14 responding teams, only two teams were including more than 50 consensus variables, five teams were including between 25 and 50 consensus variables and four teams were including between 6 and 24 consensus variables, one team did not provide details of the variables collected and two teams did not include any of the consensus variables as the project had already commenced or the measures were not relevant to their study. Conclusions: Deriving consensus measures across diverse research projects and contexts was challenging. The major barrier to their implementation was related to the time taken to develop and present these measures. Inclusion of consensus measures into future funding announcements would facilitate researchers integrating these measures within application protocols. We suggest that adoption of consensus measures developed here, across the field of hypertension, would help advance the science in this area, allowing for more comparable data sets and generalizable inferences.
Volume
13
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Políticas de salud, Servicios de salud
Sistema cardiaco, Sistema cardiovascular
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85015260273
PubMed ID
Source
Globalization and Health
ISSN of the container
17448603
Sponsor(s)
Argentinian Ministry of Science and Technology (MINCYT), Argentina National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Australia São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP), Brazil Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Canada Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences (CAMS), China Research & Innovation DG, European Commission, EU
Responses to RFAs undergo rigorous peer review through Alliance member’s existing funding processes, although alliance members are moving towards joint peer review by all member agencies. To date, this model has been piloted on a small scale on two of the previous funding calls, and rollout to all agencies is expected for 2017. While this peer-review panel makes recommendations for funding, funding decisions are ultimately made by each of the GACD member agencies, and they are the bodies who award and administer all research funds.
Funding for the studies described and for manuscript submission was provided by the GACD Hypertension Programme funding agencies—Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Grand Challenges Canada; International Development Research Centre; Canadian Stroke Network; Australian National Health and Medical Research Council; the US National Institutes of Health (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke); the United Kingdom Medical Research Council; and the South African Medical Research Council. Funding bodies had no role in the study design or interpretation of the data collected during this study, nor did they have any role in developing the key recommendations resulting from this study.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus