90% Of Nigeria’s Health Research Is Donor-Funded
According to Babatunde Salako, Director General of the Nigerian Institute of Medical Research (NIMR), nearly 90% of all medical research in Nigeria has been funded by donors.
He stated this in Abuja during a meeting organised by the organization in collaboration with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), on Wednesday.
He said health research are still poorly funded in Nigeria, adding that there is a need to establish direct funding for health research in Nigeria via a dedicated Medical Research Council.
He said the creation of a Nigeria Medical Research Council, with permanent federal funding, will not only strengthen and coordinate health and healthcare research, but also provide a competitive funding programme targeting investigators at universities, hospitals, and research institutions while complementing other extramural funding systems such as the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund).
He said, “The best thing that can happen to Nigeria is to have its medical research council, which is specifically to fund all health research in the country from universities to research institutes and other institutions.
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“Most modern successful countries have functional research and development through a specific health research funding agency like the National Institute of Health in the United States of America, and the Medical Research Council in the United Kingdom. Even though the government is funding research through TETFund, it is restricted to tertiary research alone that is specifically for universities, and it covers all forms of research and not health alone.”
He said the impact of the Medical Research Council will be felt in the better health indices, number of direct grants to Nigeria, number of locally funded projects, and use of policy briefs from research evidence/innovations, as well as homegrown solutions to challenges in drugs, vaccine development, and the health system.
He called for an amendment to the NIMR act back to its original vision as Medical Research Council as it was called in 1958.
Chairman Senate Committee on Healthcare Services, Yusuf Tanko Sununu, said the National Assembly is working towards improving funding for research in the country. He said that the research grant of NIMR has grown from less than $200, 000 to $ 6 million dollars as of October last year following recommendations on the need for improvement during oversight.
He said that prioritizing research can help in improving Nigeria’s foreign exchange earnings.