Call for applications: Health Research at the Nexus of Humanitarian Crises and Climate Change

The Fogarty International Center of the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) and partner organizations will host a Global Forum on Humanitarian Health Research (GFH2R) inclusive of public webinars and an in-person meeting in May 2025 (dates TBD) in Nairobi, Kenya.

GFH2R seeks to bring researchers and humanitarian organizations (including NGOs, local policymakers, and international agencies) together to share experiences and promote collaboration around health research in humanitarian settings. The theme for GFH2R 2025 is Health Research at the Nexus of Humanitarian Crises and Climate Change.

All interested applicants should review the information below and submit an application no later than October 7, 2024 on the application website . Note: Case study presenter applications will include a brief proposal.

Humanitarian crises—including those resulting from armed conflict, forced migration and displacement, natural hazards, large-scale epidemics, and climate change—continue to proliferate globally and impact more people today than at any point in recorded history. To better meet the health needs of people affected by these events, humanitarian organizations need to act on reliable evidence. Unfortunately, there is limited scientific evidence available for these organizations to draw upon. Conducting health research in a humanitarian context is complex and uniquely challenging and has often been limited to small-scale pilots or evaluation in the past, which has resulted in a significant gap in evidence available to inform humanitarian policy and practice.

The Global Forum for Humanitarian Health Research (GFH2R) is a unique effort to address this gap. The Forum seeks to bring researchers and humanitarian organizations (including NGOs, local policymakers, and international agencies) together to share experiences and promote collaboration around health research in humanitarian settings. The meeting is built around case study presentations by researchers from regions of the world affected by humanitarian crises. The Forum prioritizes the participation of researchers from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), encourages networking and mentoring, and creates a venue for open and inclusive discussions.

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