Article Text

Crowdfunding for health research: a qualitative evidence synthesis and a pilot programme
  1. Eneyi Edith Kpokiri1,
  2. Clarisse Sri-Pathmanathan1,
  3. Priyanka Shrestha1,2,
  4. Sana Navaid3,
  5. Teerawat Wiwatpanit4,
  6. Asha Wijegunawardana5,
  7. Mahmud Ali Umar6,
  8. Debra Jackson7,
  9. Jackeline Alger8,9,
  10. Meghan A Bohren10,
  11. Mia Hoole11,
  12. Meredith Labarda12,
  13. Noel Juban12,
  14. Pascal Launois13,
  15. Weiming Tang14,
  16. Beatrice Halpaap13,
  17. Joseph D Tucker1,15
  1. 1Department of Clinical Research, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
  2. 2Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington State, USA
  3. 3Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina System, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA
  4. 4National Science and Technology Development Agency, Khlong Luang, Thailand
  5. 5Department of Bioprocess Technology, Rajarata University of Sri Lanka, Mihintale, Sri Lanka
  6. 6Department of Biology, Kano University of Science and Technology, Wudil, Kano State, Nigeria
  7. 7Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
  8. 8Department of Clinical Laboratory, Hospital Escuela; Faculty of Medical Sciences, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras, Tegucigalpa, Honduras
  9. 9Instituto de Enfermedades Infecciosas Parasitología Antonio Vidal, Tegucigalpa, Honduras
  10. 10Centre for Health Equity, University of Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  11. 11Because Stories, Johannesburg, South Africa
  12. 12Department of Medicine, University of the Philippines Manila School of Health Sciences, Palo, Philippines
  13. 13Special Programme for Research & Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR), World Health Organization, Geneve, Switzerland
  14. 14School of Public Health, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China
  15. 15Institute for Global Health and Infectious Diseases, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA
  1. Correspondence to Dr Eneyi Edith Kpokiri; eneyi.kpokiri{at}lshtm.ac.uk

Abstract

Background Many low-income and middle-income country (LMIC) researchers have disadvantages when applying for research grants. Crowdfunding may help LMIC researchers to fund their research. Crowdfunding organises large groups of people to make small contributions to support a research study. This manuscript synthesises global qualitative evidence and describes a Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR) crowdfunding pilot for LMIC researchers.

Methods Our global systematic review and qualitative evidence synthesis searched six databases for qualitative data. We used a thematic synthesis approach and assessed our findings using the GRADE-CERQual approach. Building on the review findings, we organised a crowdfunding pilot to support LMIC researchers and use crowdfunding. The pilot provided an opportunity to assess the feasibility of crowdfunding for infectious diseases of poverty research in resource-constrained settings.

Results Nine studies were included in the qualitative evidence synthesis. We identified seven findings which we organised into three broad domains: public engagement strategies, correlates of crowdfunding success and risks and mitigation strategies. Our pilot data suggest that crowdfunding is feasible in diverse LMIC settings. Three researchers launched crowdfunding campaigns, met their goals and received substantial monetary (raising a total of US$26 546 across all three campaigns) and non-monetary contributions. Two researchers are still preparing for the campaign launch due to COVID-19-related difficulties.

Conclusion Public engagement provides a foundation for effective crowdfunding for health research. Our evidence synthesis and pilot data provide practical strategies for LMIC researchers to engage the public and use crowdfunding. A practical guide was created to facilitate these activities across multiple settings.

  • systematic review
  • public health
  • qualitative study
  • other infection, disease, disorder, or injury

Data availability statement

Data are available on reasonable request.

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This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ON THIS TOPIC

  • Crowdfunding has been used to fund health causes, technology start-ups, creative projects, and more recently, scientific research. Although crowdfunding has been used for research funding in high-income settings, there is less evidence about its feasibility in low-income and middle-income country (LMIC) settings. In addition, previous reviews of crowdfunding have not focused on public engagement strategies that may be important for developing effective crowdfunding campaigns.

WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS

  • Our pilot programme shows that crowdfunding is feasible option for LMIC researchers and public engagement is key for crowdfunding success as it creates opportunities for the public to contribute to and be involved with the research. The qualitative evidence synthesis suggests that early-career researchers, proof-of-concept and pilot research studies may be particularly well suited to crowdfunding.

HOW THIS STUDY MIGHT AFFECT RESEARCH, PRACTICE OR POLICY

  • There are specific risks involved with crowdfunding for health research, while we highlighted some mitigation strategies for these risks, there is need for more peer-reviewed evidence on effective strategies to address these risks and the extent to which crowdfunding can support democratisation of research.

Introduction

Crowdfunding engages large groups of people who make small contributions to support a research study.1 It provides a method for researchers to engage with the public to spur interest and cultivate local partnerships.2 Crowdfunding provides a way for communities and stakeholders to invest in locally relevant topics and directly contribute to scientific research. Crowdfunding has been used to support research studies in many high-income countries (HICs),3–5 but is rarely used in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs).6

LMIC researchers are often disadvantaged in applying for research grants compared with their HIC counterparts due to power asymmetries within global health.7 A telling example of this is the imbalance in authorship within high-impact global health journals across the world.8 9 Another example is the ‘brain drain’ of LMIC expertise and the disproportionate funding allocated to HIC researchers compared with their LMIC counterparts.10 11 International donors have supported the research efforts in LMICs,12 13 which potentially leads to donor-driven research agendas, with a disregard for local needs, knowledge and languages.14 15 One way to expand LMIC-based research funding is crowdfunding, a process in which researchers engage with their communities and raise funds at the local and international level in order to conduct meaningful research. More local funding for research is one step to disrupting the unequal relationships observed within global health and may contribute to creating networks within the Global South, thereby increasing LMIC ownership.14 In addition, local researchers working in their own communities may have a greater likelihood of securing research funding relevant to addressing local priorities. Crowdfunding presents a potential opportunity to democratise, decentralise and decolonise health research, and to build health networks between like-minded researchers and their communities. There is also a need to explore the associated risks of crowdfunding health research.

We organised a TDR Global open call and pilot programme to support selected LMIC researchers with their own crowdfunding for research campaigns. TDR, the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases is based at the WHO and is cosponsored by the UNICEF, the United Nations Development Programme, the World Bank and WHO. TDR Global is the part of TDR focused on public engagement and supports global research efforts on infectious diseases of poverty. This manuscript synthesises global qualitative evidence on crowdfunding using a systematic review and describes a TDR pilot focused on public engagement and crowdfunding led by LMIC health researchers. The overall aim is to expand the literature by summarising the available evidence on crowdfunding for research and by assessing its feasibility in LMIC settings.

Methods

A systematic review and qualitative evidence synthesis

The purpose of this review was to systematically identify and synthesise evidence on crowdfunding for health research, including barriers, facilitators and implications for policy and practice.16 We followed the Cochrane handbook for conducting systematic reviews and used the 2020 PRISMA guidance.17 18 ,19

We searched PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, Scopus, Global Health and Google Scholar. We used the key terms [Crowdfunding or public-funded or public contribution] OR AND [Research]. We also searched registers for grey literature including theses and dissertations, article preprints, conference proceedings, and the reference lists of relevant manuscripts. Search outputs from the databases were combined and deduplicated.

Search outputs were screened by title, then abstract and finally full text. Our inclusion criteria were limited to studies reporting crowdfunding in health research and published in English, between 1 January 2000 and 23 March 2021. The search was updated on 22 September 2021 (online supplemental appendix I). We employed a qualitative evidence synthesis which only examines qualitative data. Qualitative data can examine the social context of crowdfunding, including facilitators and barriers of crowdfunding. Second, qualitative data can be useful in understanding how crowdfunding may influence intersectional issues related to gender, early career research status, and related issues. Third, qualitative studies are important for assessing values, preferences and implementation. As a result, we included studies with primary qualitative data, on crowdfunding for research, in the English language and published in the last decade. We excluded studies with purely quantitative data, editorials, opinion pieces, practical guides and reviews. Studies on crowdfunding for other reasons other than research, published over 10 years ago or in a language other than English were also excluded. Two independent reviewers (EEEK and CS) screened studies for inclusion and disagreements were resolved through consensus-based discussion with the wider team. EEEK and CS extracted relevant data, including study objectives, participants, study setting, study design, data collection methods, qualitative themes, main study findings and where possible, correlates of crowdfunding success. We also independently assessed methodological limitations using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme tool with a checklist for each study, including validity, relevance, adequacy, methodological limitations and risk of bias.20

Supplemental material

We used a thematic synthesis approach21 for data analysis, which involved familiarisation with the data, coding the primary studies, developing themes and using these themes to generate further understanding and hypotheses. We used the GRADE-CERQual (Confidence in the Evidence from Reviews of Qualitative research) approach to assess confidence in each qualitative review finding, based on four key components: methodological limitations, coherence of the review finding, adequacy of the data, and relevance of the included studies to the review question.22–27 After assessing each of these components, we made an overall judgement on the confidence we had in each review finding (high, moderate, low or very low). The CERQual approach has been applied to qualitative and mixed methods systematic reviews in a number of WHO global guidelines because it provides high levels of transparency and precision.22

The pilot programme

Building on the themes identified in the qualitative evidence synthesis, we developed a crowdfunding pilot programme in partnership with TDR Global. The main objective of this pilot programme was to test the effectiveness of crowdfunding as a means to finance health research in LMICs. The pilot took place in three stages: an open call to solicit LMIC researchers interested in crowdfunding; a capacity building workshop; the launch of a crowdfunding campaign with mentorship and support for finalists (figure 1).

Figure 1

Stages of the TDR Global Pilot Programme focused on public engagement and crowdfunding led by low-income and-middle-income countries (LMICs) health researchers. (TDR is the UNICEF/UNDP/World Bank/WHO Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases).

The open call

The crowdsourcing open call was designed using the framework provided by the TDR/Social Enterpreneurship to Spur Health (SESH)/Social Inovation in Health Initaitve (SIHI) Practical Guide on Crowdsourcing in Health and Health Research.28

Our open call was conducted in five steps, including convening a steering committee, promoting community participation and engagement, receiving and judging contributions, recognising the finalists and implementing solutions. Detailed information on the process of these stages is described in online supplemental appendix II. We invited stakeholders in crowdfunding to join the steering committee. The crowdfunding call had 15 confirmed steering committee members (9 women and 6 men). All members of the steering committee had LMIC experience in crowdfunding for research or public engagement. The steering committee met monthly via a 1-hour videoconference to provide guidance on the open call. The open call accepted submissions over 6 weeks. We promoted the call for submissions using infographics shared on social media channels and emails. At the end of the call, all submissions were screened for eligibility by the research team and eligible entries were sent to judges. We invited independent judges from the WHO TDR Global network to review submissions. Criteria for evaluation included compelling science, capacity for public engagement and personal connection to the infectious disease topic. Emerging finalists were provided feedback and supported with capacity building trainings to launch their crowdfunding campaign. We define a finalist submission as one that achieves a mean score of 7 or above out 10 after screening and judging process. A total of 592 people volunteered to serve as judges and 47 were selected to review submissions. We selected volunteer judges based on TDR Global membership and LMIC research experience.

Capacity building

The finalists were recognised through a TDR announcement and supported to attend a capacity-building workshop in Geneva. The one and half-day workshop included 1:1 mentoring from TDR Global members, presentations on crowdfunding (online supplemental appendix III), and group discussions about how to enhance public engagement and crowdfunding in LMICs. After the workshop, a monthly working group composed of finalists and mentors reported on crowdfunding progress.

Campaign launch

Three finalists launched crowdfunding campaigns. They used multiple public engagement strategies to solicit both monetary and non-monetary contributions for their research projects. At the end of their campaigns, all three finalists exceeded their target amounts and raised between US$7000 and US$11 000.

Patient public engagement

This study was carried out as a systematic review and pilot programme. No patients were involved. The systematic review made use of publicly available research on crowdfunding for research. Our pilot programme commenced as a crowdsourcing open call to the public soliciting LMIC researchers with interest to crowdfund for their research projects. Selected finalists in the pilot programme launched their campaigns and promoted widely for public input and contributions. A working group and end-user group, with professional and practical experience with crowdfunding for health research, were invited to comment on several drafts of this manuscript. In the final stages, a TDR Global external peer review was completed and six LMIC-based peer reviewers also provided feedback. A practical guide was developed by the same authors alongside this systematic review, using an adapted Delphi method to enable co-creation. It is available online, open to the public and provides practical advice on how to organise public engagement and crowdfunding for health research, using evidence from this review.1

Results

Qualitative evidence synthesis

This qualitative evidence synthesis summarises evidence from published literature on facilitators and barriers of crowdfunding for research. Our initial electronic searches yielded 498 citations after deduplication (figure 2). We assessed articles through title screening, abstract and finally through full-text screening. After exclusions, six papers from the database search met our inclusion criteria. An additional three studies were retrieved from reference lists and a grey literature search. Of the nine included studies, seven focused on HICs and two included global data, including from LMICs. The characteristics of included studies and their main findings are provided in online supplemental appendix IV. Seven studies reported on data from one country and two reported on data from multiple countries. Four studies were qualitative studies and five were mixed methods. Full details of the critical appraisal checklists completed for each study is available in online supplemental appendix V.

Figure 2

PRISMA flow diagram showing selection of studies on crowdfunding for health research. PRISMA, Preffered Reporting Items for Sytematic reviews and Meta Analysis.

Of the nine included papers, six explored the processes and factors that were associated with successful crowdfunding campaigns (table 1).2 29–33 Three articles assessed the feasibility of conducting crowdfunding for health and/or scientific research.34–36 We identified seven findings which we organised into three broad domains: public engagement strategies, correlates of crowdfunding success, and risks and mitigation strategies. Of the seven findings, five were graded as moderate confidence and two were graded as low confidence using the GRADE-CERQual approach (table 2).

Table 1

Summary of included studies and quality assessment

Table 2

Evidence profile and assessment of confidence in the review findings as per GRADE-CERQual methodology

Public engagement strategies

Strong public engagement (eg, networking and disseminating appealing, clear, and locally relevant information) facilitated crowdfunding for research (Moderate confidence).2 29–33 36

We define public engagement in research as two-way communication between the researcher and the public for mutual benefit. Evidence showed that networking skills and the ability to share a campaign among personal, professional and social media networks were strongly associated with achieving crowdfunding campaign goals. Using multiple communication channels, including social media, blogs, direct contact, email, newspaper, community radio, in-person events and conferences was also recommended. Using simple messages delivered by image or video increased donations: four studies suggested that campaigns with videos were more likely to succeed and were preferred by potential backers.31–33 36 They also found that keeping the audience updated through regular communication during and after the campaign led to more pledges and higher odds of success.31 32 Four studies found that researchers who partnered with non-governmental organisations, universities or foundations enhanced their public engagement achievements.29–31 34

Crowdfunding expanded bidirectional communication between researchers and the public. This channel between researchers and the public increased the public’s trust, awareness, and understanding of science (low confidence)2 31–33

One study found that feedback mechanisms, particularly two-way feedback between the backers and the researcher, significantly increased crowdfunding success.33 Evidence showed that crowdfunding can also help to bridge the gap between society and science by promoting public understanding of science through accessible resources.2 31–33

Correlates of crowdfunding success

Correlates of funding success included lower funding targets, researcher endorsements, the offer of rewards to backers, and testimonials and input from known NGOs. Projects were also more successful if they were hosted on scientific crowdfunding platforms (Moderate confidence).30 32 33

In addition to public engagement and communication strategies, certain factors were associated with crowdfunding success. One study found that campaigns hosted on specialised scientific crowdfunding platforms were more likely to reach their goals compared with campaigns on general interest crowdfunding platforms.30 Projects that offered rewards (eg, small gifts to backers) had higher odds of achieving their goals.32 The evidence on researcher endorsements is mixed. One study found that researcher endorsements by other professionals increased funding success,32 but another found that research quality signals (highest academic title, scientific awards and the complexity and length of project description) had no effect on funding success.33 Similarly, endorsements and the sponsorship of platforms by established journals were not correlated with funding success. In a survey of stated preferences, one study found that researcher reputation is important to backers.29

Students, early career researchers and people using innovative methods were more likely to meet their crowdfunding goals and benefit from the process. (Moderate confidence)32–34 36

Four studies found that students, early career researchers, and people with innovative studies were more likely to meet their campaign goals and benefit from the process.32–34 36 Early career researchers were defined as people within ten years of a terminal degree and it was found they had higher rates of achieving financial crowdfunding goals. Although established researchers have larger research networks, crowdfunding engages broader audiences, therefore, traditional markers of quality, such as prior publications and researcher reputation, may not be so important. Three studies found that project risk was not associated with lower odds of success.2 32 33 However, one study found that some donors remained risk-averse and that innovative projects were modestly less successful.30

Early-stage, proof-of -concept, pilot research and other smaller scale research projects were more suited to crowdfunding. (Moderate confidence)2 30–32 34–36

Seven studies showed that crowdfunding may be an effective option to rapidly raise funds for research projects.2 30–32 34–36 Studies suggested that crowdfunding may be especially useful for pilot, phase one clinical trials, or early-stage proof-of-concept research because campaigns with smaller targets were usually more successful.29 35 Crowdfunding could complement or extend an existing research project. Alternatively, crowdfunding could support pilot studies, in sight of later applying to larger funding grants.36 One study on crowdfunding for clinical trials found that 95% of campaigns used a flexible model where researchers kept all the funds raised.35 These flexible models enabled researchers to get started on projects regardless of whether they reached their target, in contrast to all-or-nothing models, making crowdfunding a useful source of ‘seed money’. Two studies found crowdfunding is an effective way to support drug development on cancer, rare diseases, neglected tropical diseases and infectious diseases of poverty.31 34

Risks and mitigation strategies

There were concerns regarding the ethics and potential risks of crowdfunding. Evidence suggested there was a lack of standardised peer review to ensure projects are ethically sound, valuable and of high scientific quality. (Moderate confidence)2 30 32 33 36

Five studies found that crowdfunding for scientific research was based on the public’s judgement and may thus promote research that is low-value, ethically unsound or not methodologically rigorous.2 30 32 33 36 Additional limitations of crowdfunding include the inability to monitor research funding allocation postcampaign and to sanction fraud and falsification.

The risks associated with crowdfunding may be mitigated by involving expert reviewers to assess quality, developing partnerships with NGOs, universities, and other institutions, and seeking mentorship from senior researchers. (low confidence)2 32 34 36

Two studies found an internal peer review system could be a solution to promoting high-quality research related to crowdfunding.32 36 Some platforms required approval from ethical committees prior to launching their campaign, but these requirements varied.32 Seeking mentorship and partnering with NGOs specialised in marketing and fundraising helped researchers.34 They could facilitate efficient research administration and facilitate payment collection.

Pilot programme

The open call received 121 unique submissions from researchers based in 37 LMICs. The judging process was conducted in three phases. In the first phase, all 121 entries were screened for eligibility using predefined criteria, including a clear description of the scientific question and hypothesis, significance of the project and relevance to the public. Submissions were not screened based on their location or research project topic. This initial screening yielded 66 eligible entries. All eligible entries were then reviewed by judges and assigned scores. Entries that achieved a mean score of 7 and above out of 10 and were recognised as finalists. With resources available, the pilot programme was initially designed to support only three finalists’ submission in their campaign launch but after screening and judging following a high number of high quality entries, five finalist submissions were selected to receive support. The five finalists were from Guatemala, Mozambique, Nigeria, Sri Lanka and Thailand (table 3). All described social innovations in health and focused on infectious diseases of poverty.

Table 3

Details of finalist projects for public engagement and crowdfunding in the TDR Global open call and pilot programme

All five finalists used the tools of public engagement to develop campaign videos for their research project and benefitted from substantial non-monetary support (table 3). In-kind contributions included assistance with developing and editing short videos from their universities, student support on social media, and scientific mentorship from TDR Global members. Among the five finalists, three had launched their crowdfunding campaigns as at the time of writing this report. Two finalists had faced some delays due to administrative challenges and personal circumstances compounded by the COVID-19-related closures. All three that launched employed intensive public engagement strategies and used existing networks to drive and publicise their campaign. At the end of the campaign promotions, they all exceeded their original financial crowdfunding goals (table 3).

The pilot programme identified some practical recommendations for implementing a crowdfunding campaign (box 1). It also identified potential risks and risk mitigation strategies (online supplemental appendix VI). Potential risks of crowdfunding included fraud and deception, misinformation, unfair allocation of funds and lack of public interest in the project. Strategies to mitigate these risks included obtaining ethical approvals and support from local experts, clear communication throughout the campaign, sharing project results using open-access tools, transparent engagement through videos and personal stories, and partnerships with universities or community-based organisations.

Box 1

Practical recommendations for implementing crowdfunding for research*

  1. Public engagement is an important component for conducting a successful crowdfunding for research campaign.

  2. Bidirectional communication may increase the number of crowdfunding donations and enhance the public’s trust and understanding of science.

  3. Young scholars and early-career researchers may consider crowdfunding for their research.

  4. Smaller crowdfunded grants can top up existing research funding or fund early-stage research that can then be used to apply to public research grants.

  5. Partnerships with experts can provide some feedback and improve the rigour of research prior to launching a crowdfunding campaign.

  6. Seeking formal organisational approvals and ethical committee reviews can increase the likelihood of success.

  7. To increase donations, campaigns should include quality signals, such as endorsements and testimonials, offer rewards, partner with known NGOs and aim for a realistic funding target.

*A practical guide was developed alongside this review. Researchers interested in strategies and tools to optimise their crowdfunding campaigns can access this guide. https://crowdfundinghealth.org/.

Discussion

This paper expands the literature by summarising the qualitative evidence available on crowdfunding for health research and by assessing its feasibility in LMIC settings. Most of the evidence collected in our review has come from HIC settings.35 37–39 The pilot programme complements this by demonstrating that LMIC researchers can benefit from the monetary and non-monetary support that crowdfunding provides. Crowdfunding could also be a powerful tool to decentralise and democratise research funding in resource-constrained settings.

Both the systematic review and pilot programme highlight that public engagement is essential for crowdfunding. Previous studies have shown that public engagement generates interest, which in turn leads to backers offering to help with projects and providing feedback.40 Public engagement skills may help to translate scientific concepts into more easily understood messages.40 Active engagement with the public during the campaign across a wide range of mediums (lab notes, email updates, online webinars) can increase fundraising success.32 Although all three pilot programme finalists who launched their campaign had limited social media experience, they were successful in developing effective digital engagement strategies. These three finalists used videos as part of their campaigns—this may have enhanced the public’s trust in their projects, thus contributing to their crowdfunding success, consistent with evidence on the importance of videos in science communication.41 The finalists received training on storytelling, and they found that using personal stories from affected community members made their video pitches more meaningful and inclusive. This is consistent with fundraising literature demonstrating that personal stories can be a useful tool to seek funding from donors for non-profit causes.42 43

Our systematic review shows that early-stage investigators and research studies with innovative methods were likely to reach crowdfunding goals. The public may place less emphasis on previous research experience compared with other research grant funding application processes.30 33 Therefore, campaigns with a broad engaged audience and efficient public engagement strategies alone can be successful in funding innovative research. In addition, we found that crowdfunding is useful for early-stage research and can then be used as preliminary data for larger grants.

Our pilot programme data demonstrate that crowdfunding is feasible in diverse LMIC settings. Evidence suggests there are barriers to seeking traditional research funding for many LMIC researchers, including fewer institutional research resources, less experience with research grants and racism in science.44 45 One previously mentioned example is authorship and the fact that LMIC researchers who have worked in international partnerships are less likely to be first or corresponding authors.46 This likely disadvantages LMIC researchers when applying for grants as authorship in publications is often a marker of researcher reputation and signals productivity.47 Crowdfunding may be a useful tool for LMIC researchers to directly obtain support for research with less reliance on external donors or HIC researchers. It can also be argued that because crowdfunded research is often more grassroots and community based, it may be more ethical and have a more enduring positive impact.48

Our data from the pilot programme identified strategies to mitigate ethical issues associated with crowdfunding. We found mentorship from local experts could alleviate some of the concerns raised about the limited peer review of crowdfunded health research projects. During the pilot, our TDR Global team was involved in building local partnerships and mentorship opportunities to mitigate this risk. Additional risk mitigation strategies include obtaining ethical committee review approval prior to launch, ensuring transparency throughout the campaign, and the use of open-access tools to disseminate findings. Finalists were also encouraged to build south–south partnerships and seek support from colleagues who were not part of the research team. This finding is consistent with other literature showing that south–south collaboration can improve research quality.49

Our study has several limitations. First, we identified only few studies with qualitative data for inclusion, however, further qualitative research looking at crowdfunding metrics would greatly enrich the literature on this topic. Second, the studies identified from the qualitative evidence synthesis were disproportionately from HICs and only included articles in the English language. There were however data from some LMICs and the pilot programme did provide detailed complementary information on the feasibility of crowdfunding in LMIC settings. Finally, previous studies have shown that charitable crowdfunding is greatly influenced by social capital, and that this can increase inequities.50 However, social capital can be built through effective public engagement before and during campaign launch.51 In addition, crowdfunding for health research benefits a wider community of people and may not be subject to the same dynamics as charitable crowdfunding for individuals (ie, medical bills) and private projects. Further research is needed to assess this particular phenomenon as crowdfunding for health research expands.

This research has implications for research and policy. Our pilot demonstrates that crowdfunding is feasible to support infectious disease research in LMICs. Public engagement can build horizontal local partnerships, contributing to empowering local funding sources for global health research. From a policy perspective, crowdfunding has not been widely used to support research studies and few platforms focus on scientific and health research, with even fewer crowdfunding platforms based in LMICs as opposed to HICs. In addition, because previous research suggests that charitable crowdfunding may exacerbate social inequalities, more research is needed to analyse this phenomenon in the setting of crowdfunding for scientific research. Global health institutions and universities should help LMIC researchers to consider crowdfunding their research.2 34 Our WHO-TDR practical guide provides additional guidance1 and helps to expand the uptake of crowdfunding for research. While our initial pilot was organised and supported by TDR Global, further institutional support will be essential for building capacity related to public engagement and crowdfunding.

Our data demonstrate that crowdfunding is an alternative option to support research in LMIC settings and it may be particularly well-suited to early-stage work led by early-career researchers. Crowdfunding could be a useful incremental step to decentralise research funding and reorient some of the core underlying principles that underpin global health funding. However, there is a need to build on this finding by testing the approach in multi-site studies and exploring strategies to mitigate some of the risks to build trust and confidence.

Data availability statement

Data are available on reasonable request.

Ethics statements

Patient consent for publication

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to the crowdfunding open call steering committee, judging panel, working group and end-user group. We also wish to thank the internal TDR reviewer, Sassy Molyneux and external peer reviewers, open call participants and finalists. We appreciate the support received from Social Entrepreneurship to Spur Health (SESH) and Social Innovation in Health Initiative (SIHI). We would like to thank TDR Global mentors and supporters of this project.

References

Supplementary materials

  • Supplementary Data

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Footnotes

  • Handling editor Seye Abimbola

  • Twitter @ekpoks, @Twiwatpanit594, @bnaligarko, @BeatriceHalpaap, @JosephTucker

  • EEK and CS-P contributed equally.

  • Contributors BH, JDT and EEK developed the original idea for the study. EEK, CS-P and JDT wrote the first draft of the manuscript. EEK, CS-P, PS, SN and JDT were part of the core working group that developed the qualitative evidence synthesis. TW, AW and MAU provided feedback on the evidence synthesis and assessed the practical suggestions. DJ, JA, MH, ML, NJ, PL, WT and BH were part of the working group that organised the process. EEK is the guarantor and author responsible for the overall content. All individuals made substantial contributions to the manuscript. All authors reviewed the final version and approved the submission of the manuscript.

  • Funding The work received support from the TDR, the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases, cosponsored by UNICEF, UNDP, the World Bank and WHO. TDR is able to conduct its work, thanks to the commitment and support from a variety of funders. These include our long-term core contributors from national governments and international institutions, as well as designated funding for specific projects within our current priorities. For the full list of TDR donors, please visit TDR’s website at https://www.who.int/tdr/about/funding/en/. TDR receives additional funding from Sida, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, to support SIHI.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Patient and public involvement Patients and/or the public were involved in the design, or conduct, or reporting, or dissemination plans of this research. Refer to the Methods section for further details.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

  • Supplemental material This content has been supplied by the author(s). It has not been vetted by BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) and may not have been peer-reviewed. Any opinions or recommendations discussed are solely those of the author(s) and are not endorsed by BMJ. BMJ disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance placed on the content. Where the content includes any translated material, BMJ does not warrant the accuracy and reliability of the translations (including but not limited to local regulations, clinical guidelines, terminology, drug names and drug dosages), and is not responsible for any error and/or omissions arising from translation and adaptation or otherwise.