Das Mannheimer Barockschloss und der Ehrenhof unter blauem Himmel.

Medical Research Often Fails to Meet Actual Needs

A new study involving researchers from the University of Mannheim shows that diseases such as diabetes and addiction are on the rise worldwide, but research into them is lagging behind and is only taking place in a few countries.

Global health research does not adequately address diseases that are responsible for the majority of the global burden of disease. This is the conclusion of a recent long-term study that used artificial intelligence to link around 8.6 million scientific publications with data on the burden of disease over the past 20 years. The paper has been published in the renowned journal “Nature Medicine”. 

The key finding is that the gap between research and the actual burden of disease has halved since 1999 – a sign that global health research is increasingly aligned with actual needs. However, the reason for this is rather unexpected: The decline is mainly due to the fact that communicable diseases such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis are on the decline. They now account for a much smaller proportion of the global burden of disease than they did two decades ago. At the same time, non-communicable diseases – such as cardiovascular diseases, addictions, and diabetes – have increased globally. However, research has not yet adapted to this shift.

to the press release

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