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20 YEARS OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH IN HEALTH/WORK/ENVIRONMENT September 6, 2012 Thoughts of a reviewer Prof Dick Heederik, PhD IRAS, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
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Reviewing scientific proposals and programs Involved in BESLPO project evaluation and the SSD Health program evaluation as panel member
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Program evaluation SSD Health Scientific quality Networking Internationalization Policy relevance Coverage of the program Characteristics of the program Project level (network, budget, duration …) Program level (calls, budget, …) Follow-up committee International projects/EU Clusters Dissemination Relevance of the program Other considerations
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Developments in the scientific community Scientific production more dominated by teams, even in field traditionally dominated by solists Teams produce more highly cited papers Development is seen in all areas, over time, even after removal of self-citations Networks have become the dominant and most prominent way to go Research at disciplinary frontiers and in novel areas is often inter-disciplinary Research management becomes interested in R&D structures
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The role of peer review in project and proposal selection? http://www.bishop-hill.net/
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Criteria voor Quality Assessment in Peer Review (NIH) Significance impact (does the project address an important problem or critical barrier to progress in the field)? Investigators (well suited to the project) Innovation (shift current research or practice paradigms) Approach appropriate? Will the scientific environment contribute to succes?
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Scientific Quality: publications, citations, publication networks ….. From intuitive interpretation to quantitative analysis …
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Quality: characteristics of good research groups Leaders of high performing research groups survey: High performance research (publications, citations (normalized for group size) Stronger research commitment More effort in group management Spent more time on network management All rounders Verbree et al., Rathenau institute, NL
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Quality: different types of excellent groups Output types correlate poorly: publications, citations, productivity, citations per publication …, and have different determinants. So, it also depends to some extent on what is asked Verbree et al. 2012 Rathenau Institute
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Peer review program evaluation: output evaluation parameters
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Program performance ~1.8 Meuro/year internal support, ~ 70% external projects
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Impact in different sub-fields
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SSD Too early to make a formal quantitative analysis of impact of the BELSPO Health program Does this result in unbiased impression given the likely additional funding from other sources? In essence evaluation of participating groups
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Networking and internationalization Strong interdisciplinary collaboration (PARHEALTH, S2Nano, SHAPES) Projects did not make use of additional funding possiblities to finance international partners Some groups had strong international networks but connection with international research community could be strengthened Collaboration with industry limited (S2Nano)
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More formal approaches to analyze networks: 44-cluster co-authorship network of papers at the 10% highly-cited threshold (Rosas et al. PLoSone, 2011 )
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Collaborative output
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Dissemination Follow-up committee not for all projects useful, for others effective Projects which have a stronger basic research focus could benefit from a scientific steering committee More options for dissemination should be considered (internet databases, software tools, etc.) To make scientific results available for society may require an additional research cycle
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Dissemination Role in evaluation of future exposure standards (PARHEALTH) Results can be used by local planners (cost benefits of various modes of transport SHAPES) Use of developed concepts in testing guidelines (S2Nano) Breakthrough technology (ANIMO)
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Coverage of the field 20% of diseases associated with environmental factors.. (Kirsh-Volders et.al. 2012) Occupational exposures (chemical, biological, physical) Environmental exposures (outdoor, indoor) Do we know the priorities in our field (risk, impact, time, DALY)?
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The field environment and health Small populations at risk, high risks (MICATR) Large populations at risk, low risks (SHAPES, PARHEALTH) New emerging risks (S2Nano) New approaches/technologies (MIC-ATR, ANIMO)
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Overall appreciation Small program Relevant for capacity building in Belgium Relevant for public health in relation to the environment in Belgium The program delivers value for money Effect of most projects is beyond the project period
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Environment and health: funding Public health Public funding versus industry funding Mixed funding (Health Effects Institute)?
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Where are we going?
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