SHARPER consortium launches to advance equitable pandemic preparedness and research benefit sharing in Africa

The SHARPER Project, a consortium of six partner institutions in six African countries, was launched to strengthen Africa’s health systems capacity to respond to pandemics in a more equitable and coordinated manner. Central to the project’s mission is improving how research benefits are shared with African communities, ensuring that populations participating in or affected by health research can access knowledge, innovations, and health system improvements that emerge from scientific work.

Thus, the inception meeting that was held in September 2025 at the University of Ibadan, the lead institution in Nigeria, gave representatives from the partner institutions an opportunity to develop the governance structure, research priorities, and operational strategies that will guide the consortium’s activities in the coming years.

While introducing the project to the management team of the University of Ibadan, the Principal Investigator, Prof Ademola Ajuwon reflected on the values of SHARPER, emphasising that, “in addition to its research activities, SHARPER will support early-career researchers through several targeted initiatives, such as Catalyst Grants to stimulate innovative research ideas, Research and Innovation Fellowships designed to build advanced research skills, Exchange Awards that enable cross-institutional collaboration and learning, and Short Courses aimed at strengthening competencies in pandemic research, policy engagement, and knowledge translation.”

Speaking further, Prof Leslie London, the Lead PI from the University of Cape Town, added that “these initiatives are intended to expand the pipeline of African researchers capable of leading interdisciplinary work on pandemic preparedness, benefit sharing, and health systems resilience.”

Ultimately, SHARPER aims to translate research output into practical policies, stronger research institutions, and more inclusive research practices that ensure communities benefit from scientific progress. Through sustained collaboration and investment in capacity development, the consortium aims to contribute to a more equitable and responsive framework for pandemic preparedness across Africa.

Article by: Adams Adeshola | [email protected] 

SHARPER project launched and convened researchers at an inception meeting in Nigeria, to align strategies for strengthening Africa’s capacity for equitable and responsive pandemic preparedness, with a strong emphasis on improving research benefit sharing for African communities and expanding opportunities for early-career researchers.

PREPARE network launches to strengthen Africa’s readiness for emerging viral threats

The Prevention and Response to Emerging Viruses with Pandemic Potential in Africa (PREPARE) Network officially launched with a virtual inception meeting held on 14 July 2025, bringing together project teams from Kenya, South Africa, Uganda, Côte d’Ivoire, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The meeting marked the start of a five-year programme aimed at strengthening Africa’s capacity to detect, prevent, and respond to emerging and re-emerging viral threats.

Led administratively by the Africa Population and Health Research Center (APHRC) and scientifically by Wits University, the inception meeting focused on introducing country teams, aligning on governance and administrative processes, and outlining the programme’s scientific and capacity-strengthening priorities. Partners endorsed a governance structure that includes a Management Committee and an independent Scientific Advisory Board to guide scientific quality and oversee capacity-building awards.

PREPARE is establishing key regional nodes across South, East, and West Africa, with a focus on clinical disease surveillance, multi-pathogen diagnostics, genomics and pathogen discovery, prototype vaccine development, and capacity strengthening. Clinical sites will use retrospectively collected samples alongside expanded prospective syndromic surveillance in humans, animals, and the environment to detect both known and unknown pathogens.

Capacity strengthening is a core pillar of the programme. Partners reviewed planned investments, including PhD positions, fellowships, exchange awards, and catalyst grants, alongside discussions on monitoring, evaluation, and communications. Country teams also shared existing surveillance platforms and laboratory capabilities, confirming strong foundations for implementing the programme’s One Health approach.

The meeting concluded with agreement on immediate next steps, including finalising contracts, constituting the Scientific Advisory Board, onboarding research staff once funds are released, and establishing regular check-ins to support coordinated implementation across the network.

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