Research funding heavily skewed against disability burden

Publicly released:
Australia; NSW; VIC

The disability burden of non-fatal diseases is not reflected in the allocation of research grants from the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF), according to an editorial by Aussie researchers. They used data from the Australian Burden of Disease Study 2015 (ABDS) and grant details from the MRFF website to explore the allocation of MRFF funding to the 17 disease groups in the ABDS. They found that allocation of funding and grants seem to strongly prioritise fatal diseases over not non-fatal disease. This means the MRFF’s aim of “improving the health and wellbeing of Australians” may not be met, the researchers say, as many diseases that affect Aussies on a day-to-day basis may not be adequately supported.

Media release

From: Medical Journal of Australia (MJA)

RESEARCH FUNDING HEAVILY SKEWED AGAINST DISABILITY BURDEN 

THE disability burden of non-fatal diseases is not reflected in the allocation of research grants from the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF), according to the authors of a Perspective published today by the Medical Journal of Australia.

Authors from the University of Sydney, the Cabrini Institute, and Monash University used data from the Australian Burden of Disease Study 2015 (ABDS) and grant details from the MRFF website to explore the allocation of MRFF funding to the 17 disease groups in the ABDS.

Between 2016 and 30 September 2019, the MRFF awarded 231 grants with a total value of $574 475 970.

“There was a strong positive association between MRFF funding and death burden, a weaker association when both death and disability were considered, and no association with disability burden,” the authors, led by Dr Stephen Gilbert, from the Institute of for Musculoskeletal Health and the University of Sydney, reported.

“The current pattern of distribution [shows] that allocation of funding is strongly associated with the fatal burden of a disease group but not non-fatal burden.

“The current approach to funding allocation may compromise the MRFF’s aim of ‘improving the health and wellbeing of all Australians’.

“At present, the five most highly funded conditions receive over half of disease-specific MRFF funding, and funding decisions do not appear to be influenced by non-fatal burden of disease.

“For example, musculoskeletal conditions are the leading cause of non-fatal disease burden in Australia but have received only 1% of MRFF funding.”

The authors, conscious that the funding pattern may reflect the “more costly nature of research in some disease areas, also compared the number of grants for each condition.

“It could be expected that the total number of grants awarded to disease conditions might be similar, even if the funding amount is not,” Gilbert and colleagues wrote.

“Yet disparity again appears to be evident as the five most highly funded disease conditions average 23 grants per condition, whereas the five mostly poorly funded diseases average only two grants per condition.”

Gilbert and colleagues concluded that:

“With the relatively limited number of MRFF rounds completed so far, it will be of interest for future research to explore whether greater funding support for health conditions with a high non-fatal burden is provided in time.

“However, the current trend of MRFF distribution suggests targeted, disease-based funding provided through the MRFF tends to go to disease groups with a high death burden and does not target disability burden.”

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https://www.mja.com.au/journal/media

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Research Medical Journal of Australia (MJA), Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends.
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Organisation/s: The University of Sydney, Monash University
Funder: Christopher Maher and Rachelle Buchbinder are funded by NHMRC Research Fellowships. They are chief investigator or co-investigator on multiple previous and current research grants from government agencies and charities in Australia and internationally. They have received travel expenses for speaking at conferences from the professional organisations hosting the conferences. They are investigators on the SHaPED trial which received heat wraps at no cost from Flexeze. The funding sources had no influence on any aspect of study design, data collection, analysis or interpretation, reporting or publication.
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