Every day, millions suffer from preventable and treatable diseases that disproportionately affect underserved communities. At the same time, the threat of the next global outbreak looms large. The Global Health Network is transforming how these challenges are met by empowering all levels of healthcare workers with the skills, tools, and connections to conduct research that directly benefits their patients and communities. This is disrupting outdated hierarchies and driving equity in where research happens, who leads it and who benefits from the evidence.
The Global Health Network’s mission is to create equitable access to knowledge, resources, and training, enabling healthcare teams in every setting to undertake and lead research. This approach bridges gaps in health systems, ensuring that even the most resource-limited teams can generate high-quality evidence and deliver effective, context-specific solutions.
The Network is connecting healthcare teams across regions, disciplines, and disease areas in person and using the best digital technology to make knowledge discoverable everywhere. Its federated leadership model spans Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, the Middle East and North Africa, and Asia, ensuring that its resources are accessible, practical, and culturally relevant.
By embedding research skills within healthcare settings, The Global Health Network is not only addressing immediate health challenges but also building the foundations for sustainable and resilient research systems within all levels health systems.
Read the full story on the Nuffield Department of Medicine website.