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UKCRC Health Research Classification System

Analysis 2022 – Frequently Asked Questions

Introduction

This document is intended to explain or to help clarify some of the key areas of the HRCS and the planning for the production of the UK Health Research Analysis 2022 report. It acts as a companion to the main Submission Guidance and is subdivided into five main sections:

  1. The Basics – which provides information on the UKCRC, HRAF and background to the report series
  2. Participation – some further explanation for our aims and how to take part in the report, including reference to how and why we make data public.
  3. The Coding – more details on how awards can / should be coded.
  4. Complex Awards – common questions regarding how to report on awards that are more complicated (e.g. extensions, block grants and co-funding).
  5. Data Specifics – answers common questions about some of the requested data fields.

If there are additional questions arising as the project begins, this will be added to the document and displayed via the HRCS website.

This FAQ has been produced by the Project Management Team and approved by the HRAF. Please contact us if you have any additional questions.

 

The Basics

Who are the UKCRC and what is the HRCS?

The UK Clinical Research Collaboration (UKCRC) is a group of representatives from the major public, industry and charitable funders of UK Health Research. Its role is to co-ordinate strategic approaches to clinical research to benefit patients, researchers and the nation. In 2004, the UKCRC established the bespoke Health Research Classification System (HRCS) to categorise all types of health research across all disease and areas of health. More information is available on the UKCRC website and HRCS website.

 

Who are the HRAF?

The UKCRC Health Research Analysis Forum (HRAF) is a group of representatives from the 12 largest funders of public and charitable health research and the Association of Medical Research Charities (AMRC), representing over 150 medical research charities. The forum was established in 2009 to take over the maintenance and development of the HRCS. This includes the co-ordination and production of the nationwide reporting; the UK Health Research Analysis series.

 

What is the UK Health Research Analysis 2022?

The 2022 report will be the fifth in a series of reports on health research funding in the UK begun in 2004. These UK Health Research Analyses (often referred to informally as ‘HRCS Reports’) have been used extensively by the participant organisations, UK Government and stakeholders in biomedical research. More information on the analysis report series and their wider use is on the reports section of our website.

 

Who are the Project Management Team for the 2022 report?

This project is led by the Medical Research Council (MRC), part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) on behalf of the HRAF. The project manager is Dr Jim Carter, who also chairs the HRAF. Jim will be your primary point of contact, although some of the work to produce the report will be shared across the HRAF.

 

Participating in the UK Health Research Analyses

I/My organisation have not been in previous UK Health Research Analysis reports. Why am I being asked to be involved?

Since the first report in 2004, the use of HRCS coding has become a routine procedure for many biomedical funders and each report has widened the participation to provide a more comprehensive picture of biomedical funding across the UK. Our aim for the 2022 report is to make this the most complete analysis of the UK health research to date, which includes contacting more funders than we ever have before. This includes additional AMRC members as well as other Government and not-for-profit funders whose portfolio may include funding for health R&D alongside other disciplines.

In addition, and only if historical data is available, you would be welcome to submit award data for the previous reporting periods (2018, 2014, 2009/10 and 2004/05). This is entirely optional but would allow us to perform the same trends-over-time assessment as those funders who have been part of the previous UK Health Research Analysis reports.

 

What does participation in the 2022 report involve?

The basic aim of the report is to understand ‘who funds what and where?’ So, to be part of the analysis, all we will need you to provide details of the health-relevant awards, grants or projects you funded that were/are active in the calendar year 2022 (01/01/22 to 31/12/22). Full details of the data requirements and inclusion criteria can be found on our accompanying Submission Guidance.

Please note that how each funder defines ‘health relevant’ varies (more on this below). Therefore we ask that each organisation provides us with a short descriptive explanation for how data was chosen and collated. Examples of this can be found in Annex 1 of the last report (2018).

 

I/My organisation does not provide traditional awards/grants, but we do support research by other means (e.g. commissioned research). How should we report these sources of funding?

To ensure as complete a picture of health-relevant research as possible, all types of funding can be submitted; the precise mechanism / type of funding is not too important. All we require is the minimum data fields (see below) including a value (e.g. contract amount), dates/duration of the work (that meets the active in 2022 inclusion criteria), and a description (e.g. tender specification) to allow coding. In addition, there are some (non-mandatory) columns where you can provide further details on funding mechanism if you would like to provide them.

 

I/My organisation is not a dedicated health funder. How do we determine which awards are health relevant for this analysis?

This analysis series has, from the outset, included awards from funders with a focus on other disciplines such as engineering, physics, biology, economics and sociology. However, as the analysis has expanded to include more research funders the proportion of organisations where health or medicine is not a primary aim has also grown.

Determining a precise definition for ‘health relevant’ is highly contextual so we take a broad approach that mirrors the approach to HRCS coding;

  • Include any type of funding for research where health is a key consideration, either as an indicator or direct outcome of the project (e.g. impact of pollutants on disease).
  • Exclude funding for topics where the health component is only implied or a long-term consideration (e.g. climate change will have eventual health impacts, but not all climate change research would be considered health relevant).

However, given this broad approach – and the impossibility of quality checking every award submitted, we are happy for individual funders to make their own judgements on what is health relevant. In practical terms, we can accept any award information you consider health relevant.

The Project Management Team can help advise you in making these decisions, but we will not have capacity to manually check everything. We will perform some post-submission assessment and classification of award data under the HRCS, so please note that some data submitted may eventually be excluded or analysed separately. However this is an iterative process and the Project Management Team will happy to work with you during this data cleaning period.

 

I/My organisation is not a dedicated research funder. Can we still participate?

The focus of this analysis is on research funding, so awards that fund healthcare services or support groups would not normal be included (else we’d also include the entire NHS budget). What we are looking for is funding that asks a question or poses a theory and seeks to answer it. So any comparison, trial or assessment of services, interventions or methodologies would all be considered research here, even if they fall outside the realms of academia.

As with the decision of what is health relevant above, we happy to work with participating funders to determine how best to approach this with each organisation individually.

 

What data fields are required for submission?

The list of data fields required alongside a full explanation for each field can be found in the accompanying Submission Guidance. A quick reference data dictionary is also available. We aim to ask for the bare minimum of information to identify what the research is and where it is happening.

 

What if my organisation does not record the data required for this analysis?

To be included in the main analysis requires sufficient detail (e.g. start/end dates, value, titles and abstracts or equivalent project summaries) to allow the funded research to be classified using the Health Research Classification System (HRCS); the bespoke coding system developed for these nationwide landscaping analyses. However if such data is unavailable, we can incorporate qualitative/narrative submissions and/or aggregate-level data on health-relevant expenditure into our broader analysis of health R&D funding. Absence of coding or code-able data does not prevent inclusion in this assessment. Please get in touch with the project management team for more details of this process.

 

What about data publicity? Who will be able to see the final data?

The short explanation is that one of the key aims of this analysis is to produce a dataset for further, more nuanced onward analyses. Therefore, as with previous reports, the final dataset (a spreadsheet of each award included in the analysis) will be made publicly available via the data pages of the HRCS website. We have prepared a Data Publicity Statement which provides a more detailed explanation of the data protection and conditions of use for the data. Our Submission Guidance section also aims to explain why we collect certain data fields.

The longer answer is that as more and more data on awards have become publicly available the UK Health Research Analyses data has kept track with the consensus regarding data availability, with progressively more of the core data collected being made publicly available.

Many funders have already begun this process of data transparency. UKRI make all awards available via Gateway to Research. In addition, many public sector organisations and charities also make their own awards available, either via their own websites or through centralised databases such as EuroPubMed, WHO’s Global Observatory or NIH’s World RePORT. This includes greater levels of detail, including award values, grant codes, titles and abstracts.

From a data analysis perspective, there are distinct benefits to having a greater amount of data publicly available, as it allows for further analysis of awards. For example, a sub group analysis of mental health funding specifically for ‘depression’ can be achieved using keywords, data-mining or related machine learning techniques. Examples of this follow-on analyses include Marie Curie’s analysis of palliative care in the UK. (based on the 2014 report) and UKPRP’s report on primary prevention (based on the 2018 report). In conclusion, a publicly accessible dataset would allow the UK Health Research Analysis 2022 to become an even more valuable resource beyond its original intended purpose.

Therefore in keeping with most participating funders’ support for open accessibility of data, and the potential post-analysis benefits of doing so, our aim is to make final data, including grant codes, titles and abstracts, publicly available. However please note that this does not include every data field. The Data Dictionary in the submission guidance includes a column to show which fields will be included in the publicly available final version.

If your data contains protected information – personal details (e.g. salaries), confidential details (e.g. patent details) or safety concerns (e.g. highly detailed in vivo experiments) – we ask for any such information to be anonymised or redacted. We will not publish anything you do not wish us to.

If you have concerns regarding data publicity, please contact the Project Management Team via the HRCS website.

 

What is the timeline for the project?

We’ll be reaching out to organisations throughout early 2023, seeking both data for the analysis and text-only narrative submissions for organisations without available research funding information. We aim to have a provisional dataset by the 31st of May 2023 and will continue to collate and analyse as the report is brought together. We aim to have a final published version available in November 2023.

 

Isn’t collecting data in early 2023 on awards made in 2022 too soon?

We are aware that award management systems do have a degree of lag time between an award being agreed in principle and it appearing in databases. This can mean awards made late in 2022 may not be available for extraction for a few days, weeks or even months.

However our inclusion criteria for this project states we are looking for awards ‘active’ in 2022. By this we generally mean awards incurring spend in 2022, meaning the award itself has already passed a series of administrative hurdles and funding is either ready to be or has been transferred from you, the funder, to the awardee. The precise definition of ‘active’ will vary as funders record spend in a variety of ways, but so long

 

How do we submit data?

Data submissions are achieved via our Standardised Excel Spreadsheet (2023). uploaded to secure FTP or emailed to the Project Management Team. Our preferred method is via upload to a folder on SharePoint only your organisation (and the project management team) has access to. Further advice on the process of data extraction can be found in our Submission Guidance.

 

Do we require a data transfer agreement to send you our data?

Our Data Publicity Statement provides some basic information on what we can/cannot do with any data you provide to us. We also have a Data Sharing Agreement (DSA) available to formalise how any data you provide will be stored securely. If you require us, i.e. MRC on behalf of UKCRC, to sign your own formal data transfer agreement this is absolutely fine so long as it meets our standard requirements for participation.

 

The Coding

How is the award coding being completed?

In 2018 we had over 21,000 awards submitted for the analysis. The good news is that the majority of these submissions are either already HRCS coded (as most larger funders code award data routinely) or being coded specifically for these analyses. We are advising funders with outstanding coding to ensure their data is coded ahead of the data collection deadline, and there are additional options for coding that the Project Management Team can help you with (see below).

 

I/My organisation is new the UK Health Research Analysis series and we don’t have any awards HRCS coded. What do we do?

There is very limited central capacity for additional manual coding for this project so, where possible, we would ask any participating funder to provide their submission already coded. However as this is not always possible, there are some options available to help with this;

  • Training staff in manual coding, which can be provided by the Project Management Team
  • Paying for external manual coding (‘contract coding’)
  • Submitting awards to be auto-coded

Please note we would still ask individual funders to determine which awards are of health relevance, although the Project Management Team may be consulted to help in this process for new funders if required. Any awards that remain uncoded can still be included in the wider assessment of total health expenditure… but can’t be incorporated into the main analysis.

 

I/My organisation does not have capacity for HRCS coding, but we would still like to participate. Is this possible?

Of course. Absence of coding or code-able data does not prevent inclusion in the analysis, only how the data is reported. Without coding at a project/award level it would not be possible to incorporate your data into the main analysis. However we do a separate assessment of the wider funding environment, including support for infrastructure, capacity and other uncoded data sources. The data would be presented as an aggregate figure and would ensure your contribution to the health research environment is included.

 

Complex Awards: Co-funding, block grants and extensions

My organisation has provided funding / is co-funding an award with another organisation. How do we collectively report this?

This will be very dependent on how the collaboration works between your organisations, and how each report the award in their own database.

Ideally, each organisation will report only the amount they have spent, and will record the award with the same details for Institution, Title and Abstract. This should ensure both are coded identically.

If the collaboration involves the funders providing different areas of support, then the title/abstract should reflect this and allow coders to provide coders relevant to the areas supported. For example, if one funder provides the funding for the research itself, and the other provides funding for equipment of admin, the former would be coded as normal and the latter would likely fall under the IndirectAward category of ‘Infrastructure’.

The problem will be if one funder provides a TotalAward value including the funding from the other, leading to duplication and double counting of award funding. Our aim will be to de-duplicate wherever possible and ensure that only the total award value is distributed appropriately amongst all co-funding organisations.

For this reason, we’d prefer funders to indicate the award is a collaboration in the Comment column, and (if possible) provide their co-funder’s name/acronym and grant reference number so we can pair up the awards correctly. This is difficult to do, but it would be of huge benefit if achieved.

 

My organisation provides ‘block grants’; awards designed to provide the recipient organisation the flexibility to redistribute funding themselves. Common examples of this include Doctoral Training Partnerships (DTPs) which can fund multiple studentships from a single award. However these awards can come with little, if any, award information with which to HRCS code. What should I do?

In an ideal world the original block grant would be sufficiently focused to allow a ‘best guess’ coding approach. However in reality this is not always possible and in most situations the IndirectAward category should be applied. More details on this categorisation is available via the Submission Guidance.

If your organisation has sufficient information on the individual projects funded through the block grant (such as PhD studentship abstracts), you are welcome to submit these instead/alongside the block grant… but if you’re doing so, please do what you can to avoid double counting of funding. If this is applicable to your data, it is probably best discussed directly with the Project Management Team.

 

How do I handle award extensions?

Sometimes funders provide additional funding to an established award, to extend the duration or provide specific funding for additional resources. In these cases the title/abstract for both original (parent) and extension (child) awards will be the same/very similar. The awards may also be linked in some fashion within a funder’s database (e.g. partially matched grant references).

The optimal method for reporting this is to combine the additional funding to the original award, and apply HRCS coding only once to the combined award. If the further funding changes the lifetime of the award, make sure this is incorporated into your StartDate, EndDate, Duration and TotalAward/AnnualAward values.

If this combined award is too difficult or resource intensive to edit within your portfolio / spreadsheet submission, our main requirement is that both parent and child awards MUST BE coded identically and a note made in the Comment column to indicate that the two awards are linked.

There are two exceptions to these rules:

  • If the additional funding falls into the category of IndirectAward (e.g. if the extra funding is for administrative support, not research) – see the guidance on this for more details.
  • If the additional funding is for a new area of research that would have to be coded differently.

In both these situations the title/abstract should make this clear and will, in all likelihood, be different to the original. In these cases, the extension is handled as its own separate award and therefore you should follow your normal procedures for coding. It would still be useful to indicate the link between the two awards in the Comment column, but this is not mandatory.

 

I have awards where there are two or more principal investigators (Co-PIs), which may include co-PIs from different institutions. Which PI details / Institution do I use?

If there is some indication of which PI has main responsibility for the award, then use that person’s institutional details. For example, if designated as the formal award recipient, primary point of contact (PoC), corresponding author etc..

If this information is not available, I’m afraid the best we can suggest is pick one. In both cases this is an imperfect solution, but will be simplest for funders to provide in the limited timescale of the project. It is one area we hope to review in the future.

 

How do we handle reporting studentships?

Past experience has shown that funders support studentships in a variety of different ways. Many use block grants (see above) and as a result finding sufficient detail to HRCS code individual studentships can be difficult. In addition there are often greater data protection / sensitivity issues on studentships than other award types.

We would advise that if you can include studentships with sufficient details to allow HRCS coding. This would give us the most nuanced picture of health research. However if such details are unavailable, we are happy to accept awards in whatever format you can provide. Note that if there are insufficient details to HRCS code, we may have to handle these studentships in the separate indirect/support funding assessment; see our Studentships guidance on IndirectAwards for more details.

 

Data Criteria: Specifics

Why are you analysing data from a calendar year, rather than financial year?

The short answer is that different funders collect data at different times of the year, and we’ve established that finalising data early in Q1 of a calendar year is the optimal time to do so.

While it’s true that many UK funders use the standard UK financial year (1st of April to 31st of March) this is not true of all. In addition, many funders will not have data on the previous financial year fully available until some months after the financial year end, as it must be collated from a range of different stakeholders. Finally, several funders collect award data and/or HRCS coding of their awards at set times of the year, with several using the relatively quiet Christmas/New Year period to do so.

More practically the way we report on funding (see the TotalAward vs AnnualAward information below) is a little different to ensure we can get a standard approach across all funders, so we tend to avoid using true expenditure as a means to value awards.

 

Why are you requesting TotalAward or AnnualAward instead of spend?

Each UK Health Research Analysis report is intended as a snapshot of health research funding in the UK. As such, getting a value for research spending is critical and a precise figure of gross expenditure (‘spend’) has merits as a better metric to use for this than an estimation.

However the practicalities of achieving this make acquisition of this ‘spend’ difficult. Many funders/awardees do not report regularly, and if they do it is at specific times within a year, most commonly the end of the financial year.

As a result, funders are not always able to provide an accurate value to amount spent on any particular award. However all funders should have the total award value (i.e. how much funding has been allocated) or, less commonly, how much they assign to a particular award annually.

Furthermore, most research funding is ‘front loaded’ meaning the majority of actual spend occurs earlier in the lifetime of the award, which if used as a metric would give greater weighting to new awards over those reaching the end of the award period.

Therefore, in the interests of simplifying the process for all funders, and to reduce the impact of front loading in awards, we are requesting TotalAward (or AnnualAward if your funder uses this system). From either of these values we can generate an estimate of award value for the 2022 calendar year.

 

Some of our awards do not have a set total value (e.g. on-going investments without a fixed end date), and do not have a predetermined annual allocation either. How do we account for these types of award?

This is difficult and will vary from funder to funder. Clearly we would like awards to match the provided criteria as best we can, but more practically there will be certain types of award where this is not possible and we would prefer a ‘best we can’ answer than awards without values at all.

In these circumstances we would ask you provide a value that best reflects the award, which could include:

  • The recommended budget from the last review; which would be best represented by this value entered in the TotalAward column, with StartDate and EndDate being the review period.
  • The last full annual expenditure from a large investment; which would be best represented in the AnnualAward column, even if it’s not strictly within the required calendar year inclusion criteria (e.g. FY 2021/22 rather than CY 2022).

Whatever the circumstances we recommend you contact the Project Management Team to discuss the specifics involved, and that any deviations from the prior criteria be noted in the Comments column on submission.

 

My award has start and end dates, but no duration in our database. How do I calculate this value?

In short, you don’t have to! So long as you have provided an award StartDate and EndDate in DD/MM/YYYY format, we will calculate durations for all submitted awards centrally, using the following excel formula to generate a value for duration in days (rounded up):

          =DATEDIF(StartDate,EndDate,”D”)

However if you are able to do so we still recommend that funders use this method to check their data for anomalies before submitting. This is because if there are any errors (e.g. start and end dates mixed up, or not recorded as a number) it is easier for funders to identify them themselves and fix them before submitting, rather the Project Management Team identify a problem and having to query it.

 

I have newly awarded grants in 2022, but we do not have a confirmed start date or whether there is any spend. What do I do?

Firstly, if ‘awarded’ means a decision is made, but the funds have not yet been released/spend incurred then it’s likely this award won’t meet our inclusion criteria of ‘incurring spend in CY2022’.

Generally we would define StartDate as the ‘actual’ start date (i.e. date at which funding is provided or first spend is incurred) if it’s available but in many cases this is not. As a result, we would suggest using a predicted/expected start date.

Please note we can’t include awards in the 2022 data without a StartDate but remember that you will have until the end of the data collection period to submit awards. Thus, if you have newly awarded grants and are currently unsure if they will meet our inclusion criteria, keep an eye on them and submit as a ‘top up’ if you confirm their eligibility before the close of the data collection period.

 

My database does not have abstracts available for all awards (e.g. they are not stored in electronic format / extractable from our databases). Am I still able to submit them?

In an ideal world, and if it was not too arduous for the analysts to do so, we would want all abstracts in the electronic dataset you provide. The more information we have available in the final combined database, the more use it will be for further analysis. It’s also worth noting that Lay Abstracts can also be submitted for this analysis. While less suitable for coding/text-based analysis, they can be utilised if no technical abstracts are available.

However so long as you have been able to code awards from other sources (e.g. from paper applications) then you are still very welcome to submit the awards to the main analysis. However, any awards submitted without coding AND insufficient detail to apply coding by other means can still be counted but only as IndirectAwards, effectively adding to the total value of R&D funding but not the main analysis.

 

Contact Details

If you have any other questions regarding the UK Health Research Analysis 2022, please contact Dr. Jim Carter at the MRC via the HRCS website.

 

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