Global Health

Global Health

Our programs are at work in dozens of countries around the world as well as across the United States. They aim to alleviate widespread suffering and death from diseases such as malaria, TB, enteric infections and HIV; and in the process train researchers and medical personnel in the developing world.

Key Initiatives

Funded by the Gates Foundation, Grand Challenges in Global Health encompasses 43 project across 33 countries, working toward scientific breakthroughs to prevent, treat, and cure diseases that kill millions each year.

Key Initiatives

Poor nutrition is linked to more than half of all child deaths worldwide. This initiative, funded by the Gates Foundation, draws together an international group of scientific investigators to study the inter-relationship between enteric infections and malnutrition to reduce its devastating effects.

Key Initiatives

The Foundation for NIH is one of 19 consortia comprising the Collaboration for AIDS Vaccine Discovery. Funded by the Gates Foundation, this initiative is aimed toward developing an effective AIDS vaccine.

Program

The new HIT_TB project is another Foundation and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, along with Pfizer Inc., and academic institutions in the United Kingdom and South Africa. Its focus is on combating tuberculosis, which infects one-third of the world’s population.

Program

VCTR logoThe “Vector-based Control of Transmission: Discovery Research” program is an extension of the Grand Challenges in Global Health initiative, aimed at establishing a pipeline of innovative new tools that will be safe, easily deployed, effective and sustainable for u

Program

This project aims to address a fundamental problem blocking the development of a successful HIV-1 vaccine. The goal is to understand how best to design T cell immunogens to address the broad genetic diversity of HIV-1.

Programs in Development

The U.S.-Russia Scientific Forum (The Forum) is a public-private partnership of the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health (www.fnih.org) and was created as a result of the 2009 U.S.-Russia Bi-Lateral Presidential Commission to encourage broader U.S.-Russia research collaboration in biomedical and behavioral research.