Chapter 2 Audit Report No. 07 2009-10 Administration of Grants by the
National Health and Medical Research Council
Introduction[1]
2.1
The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) is a statutory
agency within the Health and Ageing portfolio, with a total annual budget of
around $1 billion. The agency, which has existed in various forms since 1936,
is widely regarded as one of Australia’s peak bodies in the area of
evidence-based health advice, and is a significant provider of grants to
support health and medical research in Australia.
2.2
Over the years, NHMRC grants have contributed to progress in many areas
of health and medical science, from advancing knowledge and treatment of cancer
to preventing cardiovascular disease and improving the health of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Australians.[2] NHMRC investment in
health and medical research, on behalf of the Australian Government, is
estimated at 16 per cent of the total national investment by both public and
private sectors.[3] In 2008, the NHMRC
administered 3843 new and continuing grants, accounting for $595 million in
expenditure.
2.3
The grants are a vital source of income for many health and medical
researchers. Individual researchers can apply to the NHMRC via their
universities or research organisations for grants to cover research projects or
multi-component research programs, salaries and infrastructure support. The
grant process is highly competitive, with less than 30 per cent of applications
receiving funding each year.
2.4
Grant applications are assessed on the basis of scientific merit through
a process of peer review and expert panels – the objective being to select the
highest calibre research for funding. This selection process relies heavily on
the participation of NHMRC grants. The integrity of the selection process is
therefore fundamentally important, as it underpins the advice that the NHMRC
provides to the Minister for Health and Ageing for approval of the grants with
the highest potential to deliver beneficial outcomes for Australia.
Changes to the NHMRC since 2006
2.5
In July 2006, the NHMRC became a statutory agency with responsibilities
specified under the 2006 amended National Health and Medical Research Act
1992 (NHMRC Act). The NHMRC Act defines the NHMRC as the Chief Executive
Officer (CEO), the Council and its committees and the staff of the NHMRC. The
NHMRC is also a prescribed agency under the Financial Management and
Accountability Act 1997 and the Public Service Act 1999.
2.6
Since 2006, the NHMRC has experienced a period of transition, facing
several challenges as it separates its administrative functions from the
Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA) and adjusts it governance and
administrative arrangements to support its legislative responsibilities and
core business – particularly grant administration. The agency has also had a
substantial change agenda, particularly in developing new IT systems to improve
its data capacity and grant management functions.
Increased funding for NHMRC grant programs 2000-08
2.7
Funding for NHMRC grants is administered through a special account, the
Medical Research Endowment Account (MREA), established under section 49 of the
NHMRC Act. From 2000 to 2008, a series of government initiatives to bolster
Australia’s research capacity resulted in more than a three-fold rise in the
NHMRC’s grant budget and a corresponding two-fold increase in active (new and
continuing) grants. Over this period, the NHMRC awarded more than eight
thousand grants, an investment in research exceeding $3.2 billion.
The NHMRC grant process
2.8
Each year, the NHMRC invites researchers in eligible Australian
universities and research organisations to apply for funding through its range
of scholarships and research programs. Grant programs generally fall into three
groups based on the intended use (or type) of the grant: Research Support;
Infrastructure Support; and People Support. In 2007-08 funding for Research
Support was $440 million, with the largest scheme, Project Grants, accounting
for $283 million of this amount.
2.9
NHMRC grant programs are based on a competitive selection process. Grant
applications are reviewed and ranked by a process of peer review, using
external assessors and expert Grant Review Panels (GRPs), with a view to
selecting research of the highest calibre for funding.
2.10
The NHMRC also calls each year for academics to participate as assessors
and members of the GRPs. To comply with the NHMRC’s policies and guidelines,
and prior to accepting grants for review, these individuals are required to
declare any conflicts of interest that could affect their impartiality in
assessing and selecting grants.
2.11
In 2008, the NHMRC received over 2586 applications for Project Grants –
the largest NHMRC grant scheme. For this scheme, over 449 assessors, 42 GRPs
and 499 GRP members were involved in the grant selection process. Based on the
selection process, advice is provided to the Minister of Health and Ageing, who
has responsibility for the final approval of grants for funding. Success rates
vary between the different schemes.
Deed of Agreement with Administering Institutions
2.12
Administering Institutions (mainly universities) play an important role
in the NHMRC’s grant process, by acting as a conduit for grant enquiries,
submission of applications and post-award management of grants.
2.13
Under NHMRC policy, only approved Administering Institutions may receive
NHMRC grants. Each Administering Institution must sign a Deed of Agreement (the
Deed) with the NHMRC, which establishes the parameters and expectations for the
management of grant funds, accountability and reporting requirements. Under
this arrangement, each Administering Institution has responsibility for the
effective management of the NHMRC research projects and associated grant funds
provided by the Commonwealth. An important role for the NHMRC is in managing
the relationship with the Administering Institutions to achieve effective and
accountable administration of grants.
Previous audit coverage
2.14
A previous ANAO audit, Audit Report No. 29 2003-04, Governance of the
National Health and Medical Research Council, examined the governance of
the NHMRC and made six recommendations.[4] Subsequent to that audit
report, the accountability and governance arrangements of the NHMRC were
amended (post Uhrig Review) to reflect a whole of government shift to improved
governance and accountability.[5] The NHMRC’s revised
governance arrangements are examined in the current audit, in the context of
grant administration.
The Audit
Audit objective[6]
2.15
The audit objective was to form an opinion on the effectiveness of the
NHMRC’s grant administration. To meet this objective the NHMRC was assessed
against four criteria:
- the NHMRC’s
governance arrangements provide appropriate accountability that it is meeting
its objectives and obligations to Government;
- there are strategic
and systematic processes for developing and implementing grant programs;
- the NHMRC manages
grants post-award effectively, and complies with legislative requirements and
program directives; and
- the NHMRC monitors
and evaluates its business to demonstrate that outcomes are being met.
Overall audit conclusion
2.16
The ANAO made the following overall audit conclusion:
The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) has
a key role in providing grants to support health and medical research in
Australia. NHMRC grants are an important source of income for many health and
medical researchers, and constitute a substantial Government investment in
research and innovation in Australia. Over the period 2000 to 2008, Government
initiatives to strengthen Australia’s research capability resulted in more than
a three-fold increase in NHMRC grant funding, with a corresponding two-fold
rise in the number of grants. The NHMRC’s investment in research during this
time exceeded $3 billion.
Against this background, since 2006 the NHMRC has been
adjusting to its new responsibilities and expectations as a statutory agency.
Consistent with the revised National Health and Medical Research Council Act
1992 (NHMRC Act), high level governance arrangements are in place: a Chief
Executive Officer (CEO); established governance structures which include the
Council and its committees; and defined responsibilities for each of these
governing entities. These arrangements constitute a sound basis for the
agency’s governance and a platform from which to address challenges and
expectations arising from broader Government initiatives to enhance investment
in Australia’s health research sector.
However, the NHMRC is an agency in transition, with a
substantial change agenda. Particularly evident is the gradual transfer of key
administrative functions from the Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA),
culminating in the NHMRC’s growing administrative independence. In recognising
weaknesses in its own management of grants, the NHMRC has also reviewed its
grant processes and compliance framework, and commenced a $3 million project to
develop a new grant management system.[7]
2.17
The ANAO found a number of shortcomings in the NHMRC’s administration of
the grant program:
- a lack of consistency
in applying guidelines and procedures for specific aspects of the NHMRC’s
selection process, including conflict of interest provisions;
- poor compliance in
managing grants post-award; and
- the grant management
systems do not adequately support the agency’s administration of grants or
allow sufficient collection of information to report against program outcomes.[8]>
2.18
To improve the overall grant administration process, the ANAO suggests
that the NHMRC focus on the following:
- enhancing management
of key aspects of the grant selection process, including peer review;
- improving assurance
of the appropriate management and use of grant funds; and
- implementing an
appropriate grant management system.[9]
2.19
The ANAO made the following overall comment on improving these aspects
of the grant administration process:
Enhancing management of key aspects of the grant selection
process
Selection of grants for funding involves a process of peer
review, with appraisal of applications by external assessors and a Grant Review
Panel (GRP) comprised of relevant experts. This process carries inherent risks
for the NHMRC, as it relies on the commitment of experts from within the
research community, who, at times, are members of the NHMRC Council and its
committees, assessors and members of GRPs, or are themselves recipients of
NHMRC grants. As NHMRC grants are highly competitive, the selection of the
highest calibre grants is largely reliant on the NHMRC’s ability to maintain a
fair and defensible peer review process.
The NHMRC provides guidelines and procedures to assist
reviewers in conducting peer review and grant selection, and expects them to
adhere to conflict of interest provisions. However, the NHMRC was not
consistent in its application of key elements of the grant selection process,
including grant eligibility requirements, recording of grant scores and key
actions of the GRPs, and implementation of conflict of interest provisions.
Closer monitoring and scrutiny of the selection process is
required to provide the NHMRC with the confidence that its policies and
guidelines are being consistently and appropriately implemented. Clear
recording of the GRP’s key actions and recommendations, and the reasons
underpinning these, will promote a more defensible grant selection process and
better position the NHMRC in responding to unsuccessful applicants or contested
grant decisions. Overall, these improvements will allow the NHMRC to achieve
greater transparency and probity in its grant selection process.
Improving assurance of the appropriate management and use
of grant funds
To provide confidence that Commonwealth funds will be used
appropriately and for the purpose they are intended, grants are awarded only to
approved Administering Institutions, and administered under a Deed of Agreement
(the Deed) that sets out the terms and conditions for the management of grants.
Owing to several shortcomings in the certification of
Administering Institutions, and the monitoring and management of grants, the
NHMRC is not well placed to provide adequate assurance about the use of grant
funds. There is a general lack of compliance monitoring around reconciliation and
reporting of grants, with NHMRC’s main grant management systems having no
monitoring capability. This has diminished the NHMRC’s ability to account for
grant funds, reducing its efficiency in its own policy for approval of
Administering Institutions or a compliance framework for post-award management
of grants.
It will also be necessary for the NHMRC to implement a
workable risk-based certification process for Administering Institutions and a
systematic and sustainable approach to monitoring compliance with the Deeds,
reconciliation of grants and recovery of debts.
Implementing an appropriate grant management system
A suitable automated grant management system can assist in
monitoring the progress and outcomes of grants. This is particularly the case
for the NHMRC given its considerable investment in research and the large
volume of applications processed each year.
The NHMRC’s information systems do not adequately support the
NHMRC’s core business – grant management. Its primary grant management system contains
substantial data anomalies. Furthermore, the system does not accommodate the
monitoring of grants’ financial and progress reporting requirements, or capture
qualitative information from submitted grant reports. This diminishes the
NHMRC’s capacity to gather and evaluate valuable information for reporting
against program outcomes.
The NHMRC was advancing development of a new grant management
system, and a data repository designed to improve the NHMRC’s data capacity. To
obtain the most benefit from its new systems will require the NHMRC to focus on
system interfaces, adopting a more rigorous but sustainable program of data
maintenance and improving staff training in grant management. It is important
that the grant system incorporates adequate controls to allow better management
of eligibility issues and non-compliance against the Deed.[10]
ANAO recommendations
Table 2.1 ANAO recommendations, Audit Report No. 07
2009-10
1.
|
To provide adequate assurance that the NHMRC grant funds
are being managed appropriately by Administering Institutions, the ANAO
recommends that the NHMRC:
·
complete the development and implementation of a risk-based
assessment for approval of Administering Institutions, and systematically
maintain complete records of those approvals; and
·
implement arrangements to improve monitoring of the
Administering Institutions’ compliance with the requirements of the Deed of
Agreement, including conducting audit activity where a high risk is indicated
or persistent non-compliance evident.
NHMRC response: Agreed
|
2.
|
To improve the transparency and probity of its peer review
process, the ANAO recommends that the NHMRC:
·
monitor the incidence and reasons underpinning the allocation
of Grant Review Panel (GRP) members’ application to their own GRP for
assessment; and
·
enhance the documentation of key actions and recommendations of
the GRPs, in order to provide a defensible record of the selection
proceedings and strengthen feedback to applicants.
NHMRC response: Agreed
|
3.
|
In order to improve the identification and management of
conflict of interest, the ANAO recommends that the NHMRC:
·
amend its conflict of interest guidelines to strengthen
guidance on acceptable and unacceptable conflicts of interest; and
·
develop a risk-based strategy for more systematic monitoring
and review of conflict of interest compliance, including a register of
private interests.
NHMRC response: Agreed
|
4.
|
To improve accountability of grant funds, the ANAO
recommends that the NHMRC implement risk-based arrangements including
enhanced systems to:
·
manage overdue annual financial reports and final acquittal
statements;
·
recover debt due to overpayments and unspent funds; and
·
achieve timely receipt, review and analysis of grants’ progress
and final reports.
NHMRC response: Agreed
|
5.
|
To strengthen the NHMRC’s management of grants, the ANAO
recommends that the NHMRC include as part of the new Research Grant Management
System (RGMS):
·
appropriate compliance controls to identify breaches of
legislative, key policy and eligibility requirements for all grant
applications;
·
a suitable interface between RGMS and the NHMRC’s financial
system to allow accurate information exchange and regular reconciliation of
the systems;
·
a regular program of data verification and cleansing to prevent
corruption of future NHMRC data; and
·
a structured training program and complete documentation for
all key processes.
NHMRC response: Agreed
|
The Committee’s review
2.20
The Committee held a public hearing on Wednesday 12 May 2010, with the
following witnesses:
- Australian National
Audit Office (ANAO); and
- National Health and
Medical Research Council (NHMRC).
2.21
The Committee took evidence on the following issues:
- research areas;
- commercialisation;
- conflict of interest;
- assessment and
selection of grants;
- fairness;
- documentation
and procedures; and
- peer
review process;
- Administering
Institutions;
- hospitals and smaller
institutions; and
- post-award grant
management.
Research areas
2.22
The Committee understands that the National Health and Medical
Research Council Act 1992 requires the NHMRC to determine its targets for
research grants in accordance with major national health issues identified in
consultation with the Minister for Health and Ageing. According to the NHMRC
Strategic Plan the research areas remain flexible to accommodate the changing
needs of the Australian community over the period of the Plan:
NHMRC will help Australia deal successfully with health
issues as they arise. These include emerging issues for the health system or
individuals, or new health and medical research developments. ... NHMRC,
therefore, needs to be flexible to meet unforeseen challenges that may arise
during the period covered by this Strategic Plan.[11]
2.23
The Committee sought clarification regarding how the NHMRC narrows its research
priority areas for grant funding and whether or not the agency places any
restrictions on research areas. The NHMRC explained to the Committee that
there are no restrictions provided an applicant satisfies the eligibility requirements.[12]
The CEO added that NHMRC has developed a series of funding vehicles to ensure a
balance of funding between a variety of types of research including laboratory
research, clinical research and public health research.[13]
2.24
The Committee asked specifically whether or not complementary health and
alternative health were included in the targeted research areas. The NHMRC
confirmed that both areas are included in the current Strategic Plan.[14]
The ANAO report noted that in 2009, NHMRC received 35 applications for research
in these areas and that 12 (34.3 per cent) were funded at a cost of $4.5
million.[15]
2.25
The Committee expressed concern that research aimed at discrediting
complementary medicine may be funded and asked for examples of the types of
successful projects. The NHMRC maintained that a grant application that showed
a ‘clearly prejudiced expectation’ would not be considered scientifically sound
and would not therefore be funded.[16] Professor Anderson described
the focus of a number of successful projects in this research area:
There have been quite a lot looking at Chinese traditional
medicine, about the effectiveness of that. There have been some looking at
Indigenous Aboriginal traditional medicines. There have been grants looking at
the chemistry of extracting of herbs to increase purity and that sort of stuff.[17]
Commercialisation
2.26
The Committee was particularly interested in the commercialisation of
research funded through the NHMRC grant program and asked the agency if it had
data on the issue. The NHMRC informed the Committee that no rigorous study had
been undertaken into the overall monetary benefits of the program but that
limited research has been done by Access Economics and the NHMRC itself. The
CEO told the Committee that these studies indicated considerable benefits are
flowing to the Australian economy from the investment in research:
(The Access Economics study found) that the benefits to the
Australian economy of the cochlear ear implant and CSL, including Gardasil, are
about equivalent to the entire government’s investment in health and medical
research over that period of time. We also did a study a couple of years ago –
and we are repeating it – where we looked at 1,208 grants and asked the
grantees what the benefits were. Quite apart from the rapid growth in patents
and intellectual property protection they have done, they also reported on
their leverage of funds into Australia. I think for every government dollar
these people levered about 30c one way or another on top of that.[18]
Conflict of interest
2.27
The ANAO acknowledged that conflicts of interest were inevitable in the
peer review process used by NHMRC to assess grant applications, given the
‘small pool of researchers available to assess applications in specialist
areas’ in Australia.[19] However, the ANAO found
that the NHMRC guidelines needed to be strengthened to provide ‘greater clarity
on the types of conflict of interest and situations in which these are
relevant’ and that conflict of interest declarations needed to be monitored for
compliance.[20]
2.28
The Committee asked the ANAO how many potential reviewers declared a
conflict of interest. The ANAO replied that, over a two year period, 1,200
researchers had declared a conflict of interest.[21]
2.29
The Committee asked the NHMRC to clarify how the conflict of interest
process works. The NHMRC explained to the Committee that every reviewer is
asked to declare on every grant application if they have a conflict of
interest.[22] If the reviewer declares
a conflict of interest they will not see that particular grant application and
will be excluded from all consideration of that application:
The first step is that you do not even get to see the grant
in the first place on the panel. Then, when the panel meets, you are outside
the room. When the panel is ranking the grants, you are outside the room and
the ranking is blind to you.[23]
2.30
Nevertheless, the NHMRC admitted that a grant can go to someone who is
on a selection panel. Asked by the Committee to explain how this occurs, the
NHMRC reiterated that the reviewer would not be in the room when the
application was being assessed but would be present when the cluster of
applications was being considered:
... they are not there when they are being ranked and not
there when they are being reported.[24]
2.31
The NHMRC added that the research community expects an open and
transparent system and that the panels are independently monitored to ensure this:
We have our own staff as well as observers. So we also
recruit lay people to look at these panels and report directly to us on how the
panel has been operating. This is a very important perception that the research
community keep us very much up to the mark on. They want a level playing
ground, so they are very diligent with us ...[25]
Assessment and selection of grants
Fairness
2.32
The Committee raised the issue of the fairness of the assessment of
grant applications and asked the NHMRC if a reviewer’s bias could affect the
success of a grant application particularly with regard to fashionable or
popular research topics. The NHMRC assured the Committee that the assessment
process mitigated the risk of personal bias or prejudice influencing a
decision:
These panels have 10 to 12 people, and the chair’s role is to
make sure that they are all put to the test in what they are saying. Remember
that not only do the panel have another 10 people looking at what they are
doing but there are one or two written external reviews on every grant, so
there is an independent review by experts. It is not impossible but hard to
bring personal prejudice to the table because in this scheme we are funding one
in five applications and they are scoring as ‘outstanding’ and ‘excellent’ –
the very top of the very good. For every one we fund, our panel has ranked
three more as worth funding but unable to be funded. The pressure is so high
that something that is just a passionate view is very unlikely to get up.[26]
Documentation and procedures
2.33
The ANAO found that the documentation for grant approval often lacked a
clear trail and that it was difficult to establish the reason why scores had
been altered or budgets reduced.[27] The ANAO told the
Committee that records were incomplete and that online databases and hard copy
records could not be reconciled.[28] While the ANAO
emphasised that it was not questioning the legitimacy of grant approval
decisions, it identified the issue as a serious impediment to transparency and
accountability.[29]
2.34
The Committee asked the NHMRC what steps had been taken to improve
documentation and procedures. The NHMRC told the Committee that it is
developing and implementing a new Research Grant Management System (RGMS) that
will enable online application, appraisal and management of grants.[30]
The system is expected to streamline and standardise the process, eliminating
many of the discrepancies identified by the ANAO audit.[31]
2.35
Other improvements identified by the NHMRC include the capacity to
undertake the peer review process in-house which will allow greater control of
documentation and the appointment of an independent chair for every grant
review panel.[32]
Peer review process
2.36
Given the inherent nature of the peer review process, the Committee questioned
whether or not the ANAO’s recommendations for greater accountability and
transparency were too demanding. The CEO admitted he had initially had doubts
about the practicality of the recommendations but has come to the conclusion
that the process will be improved by meeting the requirements:
I think in the discussions during the review I probably did
have some concerns that there was perhaps a misunderstanding about what would
work and what does not. Peer review is eventually an opinion by somebody who is
worthy to give that opinion, but at the end of the day I think that the
recommendations are compatible with nevertheless having high-quality peer
review without influencing that. Indeed ... it will improve that. For example,
this year for our panels we are going to not only document it more but we are
going to be making them nail their colours to the wall on each of our selection
criteria, not just the overall one.[33]
Administering Institutions
2.37
The ANAO report was critical of the both the NHMRC’s certification
process for Administering Institutions and the ongoing monitoring of the
Institutions for compliance.[34] The ANAO noted that
NHMRC’s inability to ‘provide assurance that Administering Institutions are
sound administrative entities with suitable capability to administer grants’
presents a significant risk to Commonwealth funds.[35]
The NHMRC had advised the ANAO that it was revising its certification policy
and developing and implementing a new compliance framework for Administering
Institutions.[36]
2.38
The Committee asked the NHMRC what steps had been taken to implement the
new framework. The NHMRC informed the Committee that the agency has set up a
separate, independent quality and regulation branch to consolidate the staff
and processes involved in the certification procedure.[37]
This branch also handles complaints.[38]
2.39
Additionally, the NHMRC has revised the Deed of Agreement, the legal
contract between the agency and Administering Institutions setting out terms
and conditions for the administration of grants.[39]
As at May 2010 the new Agreement is out for consultation with the community
and, after relevant feedback is incorporated, will be forwarded to the NHMRC
research advisory committee and Council.[40]
2.40
Further, the NHMRC told the Committee that the overall policy framework
for Administering Institutions has been updated and as at May 2010 is out for
comment.[41] The CEO explained that
there have been some delays outside the agency’s control in finalising the new
policy documentation but it expects completion by the middle of 2010:
The first is that the Department of Innovation, Industry,
Science and Research had just changed their rules about the support of the
indirect costs of research, and that has impacted on the relationship between
universities and medical research institutes. That has affected the way we need
to approach our policy. As you are probably aware too, the government’s
considerations around health reform, the role of research in that, and the
comments about supporting the current costs of research and training also mean
that we need to make sure that our policy does not stand in the way of the
cooperation that we hope for. So there have been a couple of background things
that have led us to be a little slower than we want.[42]
Hospitals and smaller institutions
2.41
The Committee raised concerns regarding the impediments faced by
hospitals and smaller institutions attempting to access NHMRC grant funding.
Members of the Committee had received anecdotal evidence that smaller
institutions faced significant on-costs in applying for and administering grants.
2.42
The NHMRC admitted that it is easier for larger institutions to absorb
on-costs and suggested that ‘smaller institutions need to think about whether
their overhead costs compared to their research activities are not
disproportionate’.[43] However, the NHMRC is
aware that their size allows smaller institutions to be more flexible and
innovative in their research proposals.[44]
2.43
The NHMRC advised the Committee that it encourages collaborative
research approaches to ensure that the capacity of smaller institutions and
hospitals can be tapped.[45] The agency explained
that Australia has an excellent reputation for collaborative research and that
the majority of its grants are awarded to research teams rather than
individuals:
That is the way of medical research these days. You often
need, say, a cutting-edge geneticist, a behavioural scientist, an
epidemiologist and then a clinical oncologist on a grant. I do think there is
something in the Australian characteristic, if you like, that makes that
collaboration fairly easy. We hear this from Australians – who think this is a
good thing – who come back to Australia after years in, say, the United States,
where the culture around this is very different.[46]
2.44
The Committee asked for clarification regarding the difficulties
hospitals face in accessing research grants. While emphasising the importance
of clinical research, the NHMRC explained that currently hospital research does
not attract a distinct stream of funding and that research projects may not be
a high priority for hospital administrators:
It does not mean that some hospitals have not been fantastic
about that, but, if you are a hospital administrator – if you have ambulance
bypass problems or patients stacked up in emergency – you can understand the
priority. So I think it is important for the future that the support for
clinical research is there beside the patients in the hospital and that the
health services research is there in the health system and is supported in that
sort of way.[47]
Post-award grant management
2.45
The ANAO found a number of deficiencies in the NHMRC’s administration of
post-award grant management.[48] The ANAO noted that this
has historically been a problematic area for the NHMRC but acknowledged that
the agency is taking steps to rectify the issues.[49]
2.46
The Committee asked the NHMRC what changes it had made to achieve the
improvements and what success it had had to date. The NHMRC told the Committee
it had set up a separate section to handle post-award management and had instituted
rigorous processes and procedures to address the issues raised by the ANAO:
We set up a specific section, developed some very
comprehensive standard operating procedures and really focused on the acquittal
process.[50]
2.47
The Committee was pleased to hear that outstanding acquittals had been
reduced from 1275 in 2008 to approximately 100 as at May 2010.[51]
Conclusion
2.48
The Committee acknowledges the benefits to Australian health flowing
from research supported by the NHMRC grants system and notes the upheaval
caused by the NHMRC’s recent separation from the Department of Health and its
move to a statutory agency. The Committee recognises that NHMRC is still
consolidating its new status but is pleased to see evidence of a tightening in
administrative practices, processes and procedure.
2.49
While acknowledging the difficulties inherent in the peer review
process, the Committee urges the NHMRC to implement the ANAO recommendations
aimed at strengthening accountability and transparency throughout the peer
review process. In particular, the Committee is concerned that conflict of
interest issues may encourage a perception that the assessment and selection of
grant applications is not open and fair.
2.50
The Committee commends the NHMRC for the ongoing improvement in
post-award grant management but urges the agency to implement the ANAO
recommendation to implement risk-based arrangements to ensure better management
of Commonwealth monies.