| Literature DB >> 18160984 |
Claudia Stein1, Tanja Kuchenmüller, Saskia Hendrickx, Annette Prüss-Ustün, Lara Wolfson, Dirk Engels, Jørgen Schlundt.
Abstract
The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) concept has been used by the World Health Organization (WHO) for its reporting on health information for nearly 10 years. The GBD approach results in a single summary measure of morbidity, disability, and mortality, the so-called disability-adjusted life year (DALY). To ensure transparency and objectivity in the derivation of health information, WHO has been urged to use reference groups of external experts to estimate burden of disease. Under the leadership and coordination of WHO, expert groups have been appraising and abstracting burden of disease information. Examples include the Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG), the Malaria Monitoring and Evaluation Reference Group (MERG), and the recently established Foodborne Disease Burden Epidemiology Reference Group (FERG). The structure and functioning of and lessons learnt by these groups are described in this paper. External WHO expert groups have provided independent scientific health information while operating under considerable differences in structure and functioning. Although it is not appropriate to devise a single "best practice" model, the common thread described by all groups is the necessity of WHO's leadership and coordination to ensure the provision and dissemination of health information that is to be globally accepted and valued.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 18160984 PMCID: PMC2154395 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Purpose, Structure, and Procedures of Formalized WHO Burden of Disease Activities
| Group | Purpose | Formal Terms of Reference | Structure and Functions | Expert Enrollment | Products | Time Frame | Funding | Impact |
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| To estimate cause-specific morbidity and mortality in children under 5 years | No formal ToR available. CHERG is to • provide external technical guidance to WHO for the development and improvement of child health epidemiological estimates • address general methodological issues | • Core group plus working groups addressing specific disease groups/themes • Active participation and inputs from WHO technical staff and other UN agencies | Experts selected informally through peer nomination for internationally recognized expertise | Related to pneumonia, malaria, diarrheal diseases, multi-cause model, under-nutrition, co-morbidity: • Publications in public health journals (incl. series in | 2001–2005 | The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation | • Increased public awareness and high-level policy debate |
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| To develop effective monitoring and evaluation mechanisms for the RBM Partnership | Formal ToR available ( | • Core group plus six task forces • External consultants (as required) • Observers | • Members are invited by the RBM Secretariat based on clear selection criteria | • Africa Malaria Report 2003 • World Malaria Report 2005 • RMB MERG Guidance Notes and Guidelines • Global malaria database | Since 2001 | ||
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| To provide morbidity, mortality, and DALY estimates for selected diseases from environmental risks | Generic ToR available. Work is peer reviewed and edited by WHO to ensure compliance with agreed methodology | No formal group—individual expert enrollment for specific tasks | Experts selected informally through peer nomination for internationally recognized expertise | • Guides for countries to conduct burden assessments • Global assessments of disease burden from environmental risks • 192 country profiles for environmental burden of disease | Since 2000 | • Seed funds through USEPA • Selected donors contributing to their risk factor of interest | Achieved impact: • Public awareness • Difficult to measure impact in the countries/on policies |
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| To provide annual estimates of the burden of vaccine-preventable diseases | Formal ToR available ( | • Core group and Task Teams for specific projects • External consultants (as required) • Observers (representative of the partner organizations) | • Public call for experts to serve for an initial term of one year with renewal • Members appointed by Director of WHO department Initiative of Vaccine Research | • Reports on disease burden estimates for vaccine-preventable diseases • Standards for economic evaluation in immunization • Tools for assisting evidence-based decision making at country level | Since 2007 | • GAVI, CDC, and the Govern-ment of Japan (partly linked to specific projects) | |
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| To effectively prevent and control NTDs and assess socioeconomic impact | Formal ToR available ( | • Core group plus sub-working groups addressing specific issues • Active participation and inputs from WHO technical staff and other UN agencies | • Public call for experts to serve for an initial term of two years on NTD STAG • WHO-internal selection of experts • Nominations approved by the DG | • Global report on global burden and socioeconomic impact of NTDs • Peer-reviewed papers | Since 2007 | • WHO, CDC • Other external donors/foundations have been solicited | Expected impact: • Engage non-health sectors (including economic) in NTD control • Affect policy changes |
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| To obtain global epidemiological estimates on leptospirosis | Formal ToR available. LERG is to collate, appraise, and disseminate burden of leptospirosis estimates | • Core group of experts | • Public call for advisers • WHO-internal selection of experts • Nominations approved by the DG | • Global report on leptospirosis morbidity and mortality • Publications in peer-reviewed journals | 2007–2010 | • WHO • Govern-mental donors • Foundations will be solicited | Expected impact: • Strengthening of prevention and control measures |
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| To provide reliable burden of disease estimates to enable policy makers and other stakeholders to set appropriate priorities in the area of food safety | Formal ToR and Standard Operating Procedures available. FERG is to • review epidemiological data on foodborne disease burden • identify technical gaps and priorities for research activities • report on burden of foodborne disease estimates | • Core group plus Task Forces addressing specific disease and causes • External experts (as required) • Active participation and inputs from WHO technical staff and other UN agencies | • Public call for advisers to serve on FERG for one year with renewal • WHO-internal selection of experts • Nominations approved by the DG | • Global report on morbidity, disability, and mortality from foodborne diseases • Peer-reviewed journal series on foodborne disease burden • Country guidelines and protocols for burden of foodborne disease assessments | 2007–2011 | • WHO • CDC • Governments and foundations have been solicited | Expected impact: • Strengthening of prevention and control measures • Capacity building at country level for foodborne disease burden assessment |
DG, Director-General; ToR, Terms of Reference; USEPA, US Environmental Protection Agency
In-Depth Case Studies: CHERG and NTD STAG
| Group | Strengths | Opportunities | Lessons Learnt | Potential Risks |
| CHERG | • Initially established below formal organizational radar screen • Small and non-bureaucratic • High-level technical products with publication in high- impact journals | • Members are well embedded in the scientific community • Good momentum through MDGs | • Members and chair must specifically avoid conflicts of interests | • Conflicts of interest may influence results |
| NTD STAG | • High political visibility and buy-in • Charged with multiple tasks, including burden of disease assessment | • Early involvement of scientific press • Advocacy champion | • Political influence on science • Moving slowly • Loss of focus |
Figure 1Composition and Structure of the Foodborne Disease Burden Epidemiology Reference Group (FERG)