Abstract

BackgroundGlobal health’s goal of reducing low-and-middle-income country versus high-income country health disparities faces complex challenges. Although there have been discussions of barriers, there has not been a broad-based, quantitative survey of such barriers.Methods432 global health professionals were invited via email to participate in an online survey, with 268 (62%) participating. The survey assessed participants’ (A) demographic and global health background, (B) perceptions regarding 66 barriers’ seriousness, (C) detailed ratings of barriers designated most serious, (D) potential solutions.ResultsThirty-four (of 66) barriers were seen as moderately or more serious, highlighting the widespread, significant challenges global health development faces. Perceived barrier seriousness differed significantly across domains: Resource Limitations mean = 2.47 (0–4 Likert scale), Priority Selection mean = 2.20, Corruption, Lack of Competence mean = 1.87, Social and Cultural Barriers mean = 1.68. Some system-level predictors showed significant but relatively limited relations. For instance, for Global Health Domain, HIV and Mental Health had higher levels of perceived Social and Cultural Barriers than other GH Domains. Individual–level global health experience predictors had small but significant effects, with seriousness of (a) Corruption, Lack of Competence, and (b) Priority Selection barriers positively correlated with respondents’ level of LMIC-oriented (e.g., weeks/year spent in LMIC) but Academic Global Health Achievement (e.g., number of global health publications) negatively correlated with overall barrier seriousness.ConclusionsThat comparatively few system-level predictors (e.g., Organization Type) were significant suggests these barriers may be relatively fundamental at the system-level. Individual-level and system-level effects do have policy implications; e.g., Priority Selection barriers were among the most serious, yet effects on seriousness of how LMIC-oriented a professional was versus level of academic global health achievement ran in opposite directions, suggesting increased discussion of priorities between LMIC-based and other professionals may be useful. It is hoped the 22 suggested solutions will provide useful ideas for addressing global health barriers.

Highlights

  • The goal of the global health (GH) movement over the past two decades has been to reduce health disparities between high income countries (HIC), and low and middle income countries (LMIC) [1]

  • Individual– level global health experience predictors had small but significant effects, with seriousness of (a) Corruption, Lack of Competence, and (b) Priority Selection barriers positively correlated with respondents’ level of LMIC-oriented but Academic Global Health Achievement negatively correlated with overall barrier seriousness

  • Barriers to global health development among the most serious, yet effects on seriousness of how LMIC-oriented a professional was versus level of academic global health achievement ran in opposite directions, suggesting increased discussion of priorities between LMIC-based and other professionals may be useful

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Summary

Introduction

The goal of the global health (GH) movement over the past two decades has been to reduce health disparities between high income countries (HIC), and low and middle income countries (LMIC) [1]. Yamey [2] interviewed 14 implementation science experts heavily involved in global health, identifying a number of major barriers such as inadequate integration of research findings into scale-up efforts. He concluded that successfully scaling up of interventions in LMIC is a complex process involving a highly complex array of factors that faces many multifaceted barriers. Overall, research regarding such barriers to global health development has focused on (A) the authors’ or a relatively small set of experts’ experiences regarding global health barriers, or (B) larger data-based studies of (B1) specific diseases, (B2) specific countries or geographical regions, or (B3) specific challenges to health development. Editor: Giuseppe Remuzzi, Istituto Di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, ITALY

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