National expenditure on health research in South Africa: what is the benchmark?

The Mexico (2004), Bamako (2008) and Algiers (2008) declarations committed the South African (SA) Ministry of Health to allocate 2% of the national health budget to research, while the National Health Research Policy (2001) proposed that the country budget for health research should be 2% of total p...

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Veröffentlicht in:South African medical journal 2014-07, Vol.104 (7), p.468-474
Hauptverfasser: Paruk, Fathima, Blackburn, Jonathan M, Friedman, Irwin B, Mayosi, Bongani M
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container_title South African medical journal
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creator Paruk, Fathima
Blackburn, Jonathan M
Friedman, Irwin B
Mayosi, Bongani M
description The Mexico (2004), Bamako (2008) and Algiers (2008) declarations committed the South African (SA) Ministry of Health to allocate 2% of the national health budget to research, while the National Health Research Policy (2001) proposed that the country budget for health research should be 2% of total public sector health expenditure. The National Health Research Committee has performed an audit to determine whether these goals have been met, judged by: (i) health research expenditure as proportions of gross expenditure on research and development (GERD) and the gross domestic product (GDP); and (ii) the proportion of the national health and Department of Health budgets apportioned to research. We found that total expenditure on health research in SA, aggregated across the public and private sectors, was R3.5 billion in 2009/10, equating to 16.7% of GERD. However, the total government plus science council spend on health research that year was only R729 million, equating to 3.5% of GERD (0.03% of the GDP) or 0.80% of the R91.4 billion consolidated government expenditure on health. We further found that R418 million was spent through the 2009/2010 Health Vote on health research, equating to 0.46% of the consolidated government expenditure on health or 0.9% of the R45.2 billion Health Vote. Data from other recent years were similar. Current SA public sector health research allocations therefore remain well below the aspirational goal of 2% of the national health budget. We recommend that new, realistic, clearly defined targets be adopted and an efficient monitoring mechanism be developed to track future health research expenditure.
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source African Journals Online (Open Access); MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Sabinet African Journals Open Access Collection; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Benchmarking - methods
Benchmarks
Biomedical Research - organization & administration
Economic aspects
Expenditures, Public
Financial Audit - statistics & numerical data
Financing, Government - statistics & numerical data
Forecasts and trends
Government finance
Health aspects
Health Care Rationing - organization & administration
Health Expenditures - statistics & numerical data
Health Policy
Humans
Medical research
Medicine, Experimental
Public Health - economics
Research Support as Topic - statistics & numerical data
South Africa
title National expenditure on health research in South Africa: what is the benchmark?
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