CIHR Training and Career Support Program – Evaluation Summary

About the CIHR Training and Career Support Program

Since 2001, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) (in collaboration with the other Tri-agencies) has contributed to Canadian health research capacity building by providing training and career support through a variety of mechanisms and approaches (i.e., direct awards, indirect stipends, and training grants) that have funded trainees and researchers across health disciplines.

Between 2000-01 and 2016-17, CIHR delivered ~561 direct award programs and funding opportunities, funding 8,337 awards. Over this period, CIHR invested $966M in direct training and career awards (i.e., funding support given directly to an individual trainee through an award program versus indirectly through a supervisor's research grant or directly through a research or training grant). Agency-specific investments have decreased over time, while Tri-agency investments have increased.

Results: What We Found

Recommendations and Management Response

  1. CIHR needs to continue to provide funding that contributes to building health research capacity to meet the objective of the CIHR Act and the needs of trainees and the health research community. Specifically, CIHR should continue to:

    1. provide support for international study at the Doctoral and Postdoctoral levels; and,
    2. provide support at the Postdoctoral level for both Postdoctoral fellows and post-health professional degree recipients.
  2. CIHR needs to define and outline how it will achieve “the provision of sustained support for scientific careers in health research” as specified in the CIHR Act, across the full spectrum of training and career support mechanisms (both direct and indirect).

  3. CIHR needs to align investments and activities in training and career support to meet the objectives of the Act, the training strategy, and the next strategic plan.

  4. CIHR needs to improve the monitoring and performance measurement of all training and career support activities and investments (both direct and indirect).

Response: Management agrees and in addition to investments, CIHR will be developing a framework and implementing an action plan to address gaps in training and support across all career stages, transitions, and paths, and will improve the assessment of training and career support activities.

About the Evaluation

CIHR's Evaluation Unit conducted the evaluation in 2019 to meet requirements of the Policy on Results, inform the Training Strategy, and the 2020-2030 Strategic Plan, and to provide CIHR senior management with valid, insightful and actionable findings regarding:

Scope

  • Covered CIHR direct training and career support awards for the period from 2000-01 to 2016-17
  • First thematic evaluation of CIHR's suite of direct training and career support award programs
  • Excludes indirect funding (trainees supported by researchers) and Tri-agency awards (previous evaluation findings incorporated but no primary data collection)

Methodology

  • Analyses of documents, end of award reports and other administrative data, including previous evaluations of CIHR and Tri-agency award programs
  • Surveys of recipients and applications to the New Investigator and Clinician Scientist award programs
  • Environmental Scan of national and international award programs, bibliometric, and funding trajectory analysis.

Associated Links

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