Introduction to the G-FINDER project
The G-FINDER project is conducted by Impact Global Health, a not-for-profit research and policy organisation. Impact Global Health is the new name for Policy Cures Research. We changed our name in October 2024 to better reflect our focus and ambition. The G-FINDER project has been funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation since 2007. Open Philanthropy also supports the project via core funding to Impact Global Health. The project tracks annual investment into R&D for new products and technologies to address priority global health challenges. This includes funding for basic research and the development of new drugs, vaccines, diagnostics and other tools for global health priorities that disproportionately affect people in low- and middle-income countries, such as neglected diseases, emerging infectious diseases, and sexual & reproductive health issues. Appropriately targeted platform technologies (such as adjuvants, diagnostic platforms and delivery devices) and multi-disease vector control products are also included.
The basis of the G-FINDER project is an annual survey of the world's key public, private and philanthropic organisations involved in global health R&D. New invitees are continually identified through research conducted by Impact Global Health, and validated by relevant sector experts. Although the primary focus is on funders, we also survey key research, intermediary and industry groups to allow us to better track funding flows. The G-FINDER survey is sent to more than 900 organisations in approximately 60 countries. If you would like to participate in the survey, please email us at g-finder@impactgh.org.
Not all funding for biomedical R&D is included in the scope of the G-FINDER survey: some health issue/product type combinations — such as dengue vaccine funding — are excluded on the basis that they are likely to be commercially motivated and/or tailored to high income countries' needs, while some combinations — such as basic research for HIV — are included only with restrictions. In-kind contributions are also excluded, due to the difficulty of accurately quantifying them and determining the share applicable to diseases or health issues within the scope of the G-FINDER survey. Finally, the G-FINDER project only captures funding that has already been disbursed to the recipient, and does not include any data on undisbursed funding commitments.
The data collected in the G-FINDER survey has been used to create this unique repository of investment data — the G-FINDER data portal — providing an unmatched resource for policy-makers, donors, researchers and industry. Our database allows users access to the long-term landscape of funding for R&D for global health priority areas, identifying where funding gaps exist and demonstrating how investments fit into the global picture. Additional information on how the data presented via the portal is collected and aggregated is available via our methodology page.
Consistently developed and updated over the last two decades, G-FINDER is made freely available and is a critical tool for informed decision-making in global health R&D. G-FINDER is the sole source of granular neglected disease R&D funding data for the WHO Global Observatory on Health R&D and is used as an indicator for the WHO Global Strategy and Plan of Action on Public Health, Innovation and Intellectual Property.