2019-20 Departmental Results Report

Table of contents


Minister’s message

I am pleased to present the 2019–20 Departmental Results Report of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR).

The COVID-19 pandemic has created an unprecedented challenge for health systems throughout the world. At the same time, it has also demonstrated the capacity of the global community to work collaboratively in response to this public health crisis. Here in Canada, CIHR has been fundamental to our international and domestic efforts to coordinate and support the research required to bring new evidence to help manage our health care systems, develop new treatments to care for people with COVID-19, and ultimately find a vaccine.

In February 2020, CIHR mobilized quickly to support a COVID-19 Rapid Research Response funding opportunity that supported 100 research projects on medical countermeasures (including antivirals), vaccine development, support for clinical trials, as well as social and policy countermeasures. I would like to extend my gratitude to Canada’s health research community for mobilizing so quickly in response to the pandemic, as we continue to develop and implement measures to rapidly detect, manage, and reduce the transmission of COVID-19. I would also like to thank the many partners who contributed to these efforts, including our Tri-Agency partners—the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council—, the Canada Research Coordinating Committee (CRCC), the Canada Foundation for Innovation, the International Development Research Centre, and Genome Canada. Responding to this pandemic has required a whole-of-Canada approach, and our research institutions have been leading the way under very difficult circumstances.

In 2019–2020, CIHR also conducted broad, national consultations on the priorities that will shape its new Strategic Plan. While the pandemic has delayed the launch of the plan, CIHR continues to develop and refine its contents, based on feedback received from the research community, stakeholders from all sectors, and the Canadian public. The new Strategic Plan, which will be launched in fiscal year 2020–21, will help to guide CIHR’s research investments over the next decade and further position CIHR as a global leader in health research.

In collaboration with its Tri-Agency partners, CIHR also reaffirmed its commitment to achieving a more equitable, diverse, and inclusive Canadian research enterprise. In particular, the agencies committed to supporting equitable access to funding opportunities for all researchers and trainees; promoting the integration of equity, diversity, and inclusion-related considerations in research design and practices; increasing equitable and inclusive participation in the research system; and collecting the data and conducting the analyses needed to include equity, diversity, and inclusion considerations in decision-making.

Working in collaboration with the CRCC and other partners, CIHR also took steps to strengthen Indigenous research and training in Canada. Through these efforts, Indigenous Peoples will set their own research priorities, guide how research is conducted and how data is used, and have equitable access to research and training opportunities. These steps are part of the Government of Canada’s ongoing commitment to respond to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s call to establish a new relationship with First Nations, Inuit and Métis Peoples – one that creates a more equal society, which acknowledges the value of traditional knowledge systems, and is based on mutual respect.

I invite you to read this 2019–20 Departmental Results Report to learn more about how CIHR’s investments are strengthening our health systems and improving health for Canadians and people throughout the world.

The Honourable Patty Hajdu, P.C., M.P
Minister of Health

Results at a glance and operating context

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) invests in health research and training, to support the creation of new knowledge and its translation into improved health for Canadians. In 2019–20, CIHR’s total actual spending was $1,202,050,854 and its actual workforce (full-time equivalents) was 492.

As Canada’s health research agency, CIHR achieved the following key results and activities in 2019–20:

For more information on the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s plans, priorities and results achieved, see the “Results: what we achieved” section of this report.

Results: what we achieved

Core responsibility

Funding health research and training

Description

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research is Canada’s health research investment agency. By funding research excellence, CIHR supports the creation of new knowledge and its translation into improved health for Canadians, more effective health services and products and a strengthened Canadian health care system. This is done by providing grants that fund health research and/or provide career and training support to the current and next generation of researchers.

Results

In support of its Core Responsibility to fund health research and training, CIHR invests in investigator-initiated research and priority-driven research, supports the development of research and other professional skills across career stages, and focuses on knowledge translation that facilitates the application of the results of research and their transformation into new policies, practices, procedures, products, and services. A robust peer review system supports the selection of the most innovative and cutting-edge applications for research and/or knowledge translation, while upholding the principles of fairness, transparency, and excellence.

CIHR’s Core Responsibility delivers its activities through three Programs: investigator-initiated research, training and career support, and research in priority areas. Investigator-initiated researchFootnote 1 is discovery-oriented and designed to support researchers at any career stage in conducting health-related research and knowledge translation projects of their choice. Training and career support invests in the next generation of researchers to build and maintain Canada’s health research capacity to respond to new or existing challenges. Finally, research in priority areas engages the research community in specific areas to address gaps or emerging health priorities both nationally and internationally.

Departmental Result 1: Canada’s health research is internationally competitive

In 2019–20, CIHR continued to adapt to the changing research ecosystem and provided support to Canadian health researchers through various mechanisms.

CIHR was an integral part of the Canadian response to the COVID-19 pandemic. It collaborated with domestic and international partners including the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Global Research Collaboration for Infectious Disease Preparedness (Glo-PID-R) to determine how Canadian researchers could contribute to global research efforts, which resulted in the launch of a rapid research response. To foster global collaboration and open science, CIHR also signed the Wellcome Trust’s Joint statement on sharing research data and findings relevant to the COVID-19.

In alignment with Canada’s funding partners and to continue to improve its research assessment practices, CIHR, along with its Tri-Agency partners, Genome Canada and the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), signed the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA), a global initiative to support the development and promotion of best practices in the assessment of scholarly research.

To facilitate effective Canadian and international health research collaborations, CIHR supported a number of international partnerships, including its renewed commitment to the Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP), its continued support of the Healthy Life Trajectories Initiative (HeLTI), its membership within the Joint Programming Initiative on Antimicrobial Resistance (JPIAMR), and its long-standing collaboration with the European Commission.

CIHR delivered two Project Grant competitions and one Foundation Grant competition. The spring competition resulted in 382 research grants being approved for full funding (85 were awarded to ECRs and 14 were awarded for Indigenous health research projects), with an additional 21 applicants each receiving a one year bridge grant. The fall competition resulted in 385 research grants being approved for full funding (84 were awarded to ECRs and 16 were awarded for Indigenous health research projects), with an additional four applicants each receiving a one year bridge grant. Additionally, CIHR delivered its last Foundation Grant competitionFootnote 2, which resulted in the approval of 28 research grants.

In 2019–20, CIHR also advanced a number of cyclical reviews of CIHR institutes, including the Institute of Aging; the Institute of Human Development, Child and Youth Health; and the Institute of Circulatory and Respiratory Health. CIHR also advanced evaluations for the following programs and initiatives: Operating Support; the Collaborative Health Research Projects (CHIRP) Program; and the Dementia Research Strategy. The evidence gained from these evaluations will help CIHR to inform the design and delivery of future funding opportunities to support the achievement of its departmental results.

Departmental Result 2: Canada’s health research capacity is strengthened

In 2019–20, CIHR took a number of actions to maintain and strengthen Canada’s health research capacity, including in the areas of training and career support; equity, diversity and inclusion; and Indigenous health research. Many of these included working with the Tri-Agencies to increase harmonization and coordination of policies and programs as mandated by the CRCC.

CIHR continued to work alongside its Tri-Agency partners to identify the best methods to deliver training support. This included adopting a common Tri-Agency definition for an early career researcher and supporting the CRCC’s ECR plan to help early career researchers succeed in the research enterprise. CIHR and its Tri-Agency partners also launched a national Healthy Cities Research Training Platform (HCRTP) to develop an interdisciplinary, cross-sectoral training initiative that will generate cutting-edge knowledge and build capacity for implementation science and solutions-based research.

In addition, CIHR advanced a Training and Career Support evaluation, the results of which will inform the future directions of CIHR’s Strategic Action Plan on Training. CIHR also led the evaluation of the Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship (Vanier CGS) program, in collaboration with the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). The evaluation assesses the needs addressed by the program, the effectiveness of program design in supporting outcomes, and the achievement of expected results during the period from 2013–14 to 2017–18. Additionally, CIHR also supported additional Canada Graduate Scholarships and extended paid parental leave through investments from Budget 2019.

In 2019–20, CIHR, in collaboration with other federal granting agencies, continued to support a diverse and inclusive research community through a number of programmatic initiatives. This includes the jointly launched Dimensions: Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Canada charter and pilot program that aims to foster transformational change within the research community at Canadian post-secondary intuitions by identifying and eliminating obstacles and inequities for underrepresented or disadvantaged groups. CIHR and its Tri-Agency partners also jointly launched EDI Institutional Capacity Building Grants and released a Tri-Agency statement on EDI, committing to facilitate an inclusive culture that is important for research excellence and rigour in the health research ecosystem.

Through the CRCC, CIHR and its Tri-Agency partners published Setting new directions to support Indigenous research and training in Canada 2019-2022. This strategic plan was shaped by First Nations, Inuit and Métis voices and will guide the building of new models for supporting Indigenous research and research training. CIHR continued to support Indigenous health research through the Network Environments for Indigenous Health Research (NEIHR) Program, a national network of nine centres focused on capacity development, research and knowledge translation driven by, and grounded in, Indigenous communities in Canada. The NEIHR Program represents the largest single investment in Indigenous health research by the Government of Canada. In addition, guided by the National Inuit Strategy on Research, CIHR and Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami are working together to strengthen research capacity through an Inuit Research Network Development Grant, and hosted a roundtable on research to support tuberculosis elimination across Inuit Nunangat.

Departmental Result 3: Canada’s health research is used

To help ensure that this funded health research improves the health of Canadians and strengthens the Canadian health care system, CIHR continued to support knowledge translation activities and targeted research initiatives related to Government of Canada commitments, as outlined in the mandate letter of the Minister of Health.

CIHR’s Best Brain Exchanges (BBEs) brought together senior policy decision-makers and research and implementation experts to discuss high-priority health topics of shared interest. In collaborations with 23 federal and provincial partners, CIHR delivered 11 BBEs on various health system challenges (e.g., vaping, sexually transmitted blood borne infection testing, etc.), while celebrating its 100th BBE milestone.

To foster meaningful engagement of patients as active collaborators in research, CIHR released the Ethics Guidance for Developing Partnerships with Patients and Researchers. The Guidance document is an educational resource focused on how to maintain trust in research partnerships across the research lifecycle and providing guidance on how patient partners can play a role in the translation and exchange of research knowledge.

CIHR continued to support cannabis research through its Integrated Cannabis Research Strategy. CIHR and a number of partnersFootnote 3 collaborated to support cannabis research that will generate new evidence on the potential harms and therapeutic uses of cannabis and evaluate the effectiveness of government cannabis priorities.

In 2019–20, CIHR also funded new research to address Canada’s opioid crisis through the Canadian Drugs and Substances Strategy (CDSS). Specifically, the Evaluation of Interventions to Address the Opioid Crisis competition supported 15 research teams that are evaluating promising health interventions and practices that have been implemented at all levels of government to address the opioid crisis.

Additionally, CIHR and its partners announced a funding opportunity to support research to address urgent knowledge gaps related to the health effects of vaping in youth and adults.

As part of the Action Plan on Post-Traumatic Stress Injuries (PTSI), CIHR in collaboration with the Canadian Institute for Public Safety Research and Treatment (CIPSRT) established the National Research Consortium, which focuses on research on post-traumatic stress injuries among public safety personnel. This work is the result of a partnership between CIHR and Public Safety Canada and includes research grants focusing on PTSI in public safety personnel.

CIHR supported the renewal of the CIHR Canadian HIV Trials Network (CTN), which has been supporting a thriving community of researchers, people living with HIV and their caregivers, health advocates, and pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies to generate knowledge about prevention, treatment, management, and a cure for HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections (STBBI). Moreover, CIHR supported additional investments in STBBI research to supports six teams in the area of biomedical and clinical HIV/AIDS research and three centres focused on HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C and other STBBI population health and health services research.

CIHR collaborated with Health Canada on the Horizontal Evaluation of the Drug Safety and Effectiveness Network (DSEN), which seeks to increase, through research, the evidence on drug safety and effectiveness available to regulators, policy-makers, health care providers and patients. This evaluation examined the use, relevance, and timeliness of DSEN research during the period of April 2014 to March 2019.

CIHR continued to support Canada’s Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR). This includes supporting the SPOR Evidence Alliance, which helps connect policy decision-makers and health providers to researchers who may be able to address their priorities and needs in knowledge synthesis, guideline development, and knowledge translation. Additionally, CIHR supported SPOR’s Canadian Data Platform and its Data Access Support Hub (DASH). This seven-year initiative is a single portal through which researchers will be able to access a multitude of administrative, clinical, and social data from various sources from across the country.

Gender-based analysis plus

CIHR has a GBA+ Framework that seeks to build GBA+ capacity and sustain the practice of GBA+ through three streams:

CIHR monitors implementation of GBA+ in each of the three streams as follows:

These findings are used to identify gaps in the application of GBA+ and inequities in access to funding, and to develop evidence-based solutions to improve GBA+ in CIHR-funded research, CIHR’s funding system and CIHR’s workplace.

One of the five priorities of the CRCC is strengthening equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) in research. As such, a harmonized approach to EDI across granting agencies (CIHR, NSERC, SSHRC and CFI) is being undertaken, including a statement on EDI and an EDI Action Plan. Initiatives in the EDI Action Plan are at various stages of implementation, some of which are described in the first annual report to the CRCC and on the CIHR EDI in Action webpage.

Experimentation

CIHR continued to work with NSERC and SSHRC on the Tri-Agency Grants Management Solution (TGMS) initiative to harmonize and modernize grants management to better support applicants, administrators and reviewers across the entire grants management lifecycle. To help identify areas for improvement TGMS delivered journey-mapping workshops to a targeted group of internal and external users who shared and documented their experiences with current systems.

Results achieved
Departmental results Performance indicators Target Date to achieve target 2017–18 Actual results 2018–19 Actual results 2019–20 Actual results
Canada’s health research is internationally competitive Canada’s rank among G7 nations in share of health research publications 2nd in the G7 March 31, 2020 2nd 2nd 2nd
% of research involving international collaborations Greater than or equal to 11% March 31, 2020 12% 12% 16%
Citation score of health research publications compared to the world average Greater than or equal to 1.5 March 31, 2020 1.53 1.53 1.56
Canada’s health research capacity is strengthened $ co-invested by partners in health research Greater than or equal to $0.80 March 31, 2020 $0.84 $0.84 $0.89
% of research that addresses sex or gender considerations Greater than or equal to 56% March 31, 2020 57% 62% 67%
% of research investments addressing Indigenous health Greater than or equal to 4.6% of CIHR’s annual base budget March 31, 2020 3.0% 3.1% 4.0%
% of the next generation of researchers that go on to work in a research position Greater than or equal to 87% March 31, 2020 69% 92% 97%
Canada’s health research is used. % of federal health documents informed by research Greater than or equal to 20% March 31, 2020 25% 23% 28%
% of research that informs patents Greater than or equal to 9% March 31, 2020 14% 13% 13%
% of research contributing to improving health for Canadians Greater than or equal to 39% March 31, 2020 37% 37% 38%
Budgetary financial resources (dollars)
2019–20
Main Estimates
2019–20
Planned spending
2019–20
Total authorities available for use
2019–20
Actual spending
(authorities used)
2019–20
Difference
(Actual spending minus Planned spending)
1,138,655,058 1,138,655,058 1,170,643,824 1,168,529,359 29,874,301
Human resources (full-time equivalents)
2019–20
Planned full-time equivalents
2019–20
Actual full-time equivalents
2019–20
Difference
(Actual full-time equivalents minus Planned full-time equivalents)
236 252 16

Financial, human resources and performance information for the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s Program Inventory is available in GC InfoBase.

Internal Services

Description

Internal Services are those groups of related activities and resources that the federal government considers to be services in support of programs and/or required to meet corporate obligations of an organization. Internal Services refers to the activities and resources of the 10 distinct service categories that support Program delivery in the organization, regardless of the Internal Services delivery model in a department. The 10 service categories are:

Results

CIHR implemented several changes to strengthen its corporate and governance activities, including the appointment of its first independent Chairperson of CIHR’s Governing Council. CIHR also conducted several governance related assessments, including an Internal Audit of Corporate Governance, which prompted the launch of a Governance Renewal Initiative to strengthen and renew its organizational governance. In addition, CIHR conducted its most comprehensive engagement process in the history of the organization to inform the development a new Strategic Plan, as outlined in the Results at a glance and operating context section. Furthermore, CIHR initiated the development of operational and financial planning and reporting processes to support the delivery of its new Strategic Plan.

CIHR’s Mental Health Strategy continued to focus on reducing stigma, educating managers and employees to care for themselves and support each other, and implementing the National Standard on Psychological Health & Safety in the Workplace. CIHR made training available for employees and supervisors through the Mental Health Commission of Canada, including the Working Mind training and Mental Health First Aid program. A particular focus was on highlighting the psychosocial factors of the National Standard by coordinating information sessions with themes of growth, development and balance. CIHR also promoted the LifeSpeak series and webcasts, along with the Employee Assistance Program, which had very strong uptake from staff.

CIHR was part of a pilot program launched by the Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages to complete the Official Languages Maturity Model, the results of which will inform the Official Languages Action Plan currently in development. Furthermore, in support of linguistic duality in the workplace, CIHR launched an internal second language-training program in September 2019 in support of achieving and maintaining bilingual proficiency within CIHR.

CIHR also launched the development of a Human Resources Data Strategy and adopted the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 30414 standard on human capital in preparation for the development of dashboards to support the business intelligence function.

CIHR’s Compensation team cleared 100% of Phoenix-related backlogged issues with pay files over the course of the year, and maintained an excellent service standard in response to any issues arising.

Budgetary financial resources (dollars)
2019–20
Main Estimates
2019–20
Planned spending
2019–20
Total authorities available for use
2019–20
Actual spending
(authorities used)
2019–20
Difference
(Actual spending minus Planned spending)
33,908,815 33,908,815 35,006,328 33,521,495 (387,320)
Human resources (full-time equivalents)
2019–20
Planned full-time equivalents
2019–20
Actual full-time equivalents
2019–20
Difference
(Actual full-time equivalents minus Planned full-time equivalents)
242 240 (2)

Analysis of trends in spending and human resources

Actual expenditures

Departmental spending trend graph

The following graph presents planned (voted and statutory spending) over time.

Long description
2017–18 2018–19 2019–20 2020–21 2021–22 2022–23
Statutory 6 6 7 7 7 7
Voted 1,091 1,145 1,195 1,208 1,227 1,189
Total 1,097 1,151 1,202 1,215 1,234 1,196
Budgetary performance summary for Core Responsibilities and Internal Services (dollars)
Core responsibilities and Internal Services 2019–20
Main Estimates
2019–20
Planned spending
2020–21
Planned spending
2021–22
Planned spending
2019–20
Total authorities available for use
2019–20
Actual spending (authorities used)
2018–19
Actual spending (authorities used)
2017–18
Actual spending (authorities used)
Funding Health Research and Training 1,138,655,058 1,138,655,058 1,183,861,746 1,201,853,838 1,170,643,824 1,168,529,359 1,117,593,924 1,068,516,854
Subtotal 1,138,655,058 1,138,655,058 1,183,861,746 1,201,853,838 1,170,643,824 1,168,529,359 1,117,593,924 1,068,516,854
Internal Services 33,908,815 33,908,815 30,996,904 31,704,184 35,006,328 33,521,495 33,333,203 28,644,331
Total 1,172,563,873 1,172,563,873 1,214,858,650 1,233,558,022 1,205,650,152 1,202,050,854 1,150,927,127 1,097,161,185

CIHR’s 2019-20 actual spending of $1,202.1M exceeded its planned spending of $1,172.6M by $29.5M largely as a result of:

Funds lapsed of $3.6M is a result of the following underspending in:

Actual human resources

Human resources summary for core responsibilities and Internal Services
Core responsibilities and Internal Services 2017–18
Actual full-time equivalents
2018–19
Actual full-time equivalents
2019–20
Planned full-time equivalents
2019–20
Actual full-time equivalents
2020–21
Planned full-time equivalents
2021–22
Planned full-time equivalents
Funding Health Research and Training 255 229 236 252 257 254
Subtotal 255 229 236 252 257 254
Internal Services 205 232 242 240 237 230
Total 460 461 478 492 494 484

The net increase from 2018–19 to 2019–20 is largely attributable to the creation and staffing of new positions to deliver and support programs to enhance health research announced in Budget 2018.

In 2019–20, CIHR created positions to lead some key priorities such as the development of its Strategic Plan and related processes for its implementation. The increase is offset by term positions ending in 2021–22.

Expenditures by vote

For information on the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s organizational voted and statutory expenditures, consult the Public Accounts of Canada 2019–2020.

Government of Canada spending and activities

Information on the alignment of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s spending with the Government of Canada’s spending and activities is available in GC InfoBase.

Financial statements and financial statements highlights

Financial statements

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s financial statements (unaudited) for the year ended March 31, 2020, are available on the departmental website.

Financial statement highlights

Condensed Statement of Operations (unaudited) for the year ended March 31, 2020 (dollars)
Financial information 2019–20
Planned results*
2019–20
Actual results
2018–19
Actual results
Difference
(2019–20 Actual results minus 2019–20 Planned results)
Difference
(2019–20 Actual results minus 2018–19 Actual results)
Total expenses 1,177,223,795 1,214,779,379 1,159,398,245 37,555,584 55,381,134
Total revenues 1,237,989 6,541,528 4,237,977 5,303,539 2,303,551
Net cost of operations before government funding and transfers 1,175,985,806 1,208,237,851 1,155,160,268 32,252,045 53,077,583
Footnote *

Refer to CIHR’s 2019–20 Future-Oriented Statement of Operations for additional information on planned results.

* referrer

CIHR’s expenses consist of transfer payments for grants and awards (93.6%) and operating expenses (6.4%). Revenues consist of donations from third parties for health research and refunds of previous years’ grants and awards.

CIHR's actual total expenses were approximately $37.6M higher than planned due primarily to additional investment stemming from Budget 2019 and other funding announcements, as well as the redistribution of the Canada Research Chairs funding across the Tri-Agencies partners in order to align with the research landscape. Refer to the Budgetary performance summary for further details.

CIHR’s actual revenues were approximately $5.3M higher than planned due to revenues resulting from collaborations with external partners, and refund from recipients for unspent funding for grants and awards ending in a prior year.

CIHR received slightly less funding from external partners in 2019–20, but was able to increase usage of prior year donations towards CIHR’s contributions to health research, disbursing $1.7M compared to $1.0M in the prior year.

In 2019-20, there were refunds totaling $4.9M, an increase from the $3.2M refunded in the previous year. Refund of prior years’ grants and awards is due to recipients’ underspending the funding received, and is based on the unspent balance of the grant and awards at its end date.

CIHR's higher than planned total expenses of $37.6M and higher than planned total revenues by $5.3M in 2019–20 resulted in the net cost of operations before government funding and transfers being approximately $32.3M higher than planned for the fiscal year.

Condensed Statement of Financial Position (unaudited) as of March 31, 2020 (dollars)
Financial information 2019–20 2018–19 Difference
(2019–20 minus 2018–19)
Total net liabilities 13,882,967 13,434,388 448,579
Total net financial assets 12,711,874 11,477,437 1,234,437
Departmental net debt 1,171,093 1,956,951 (785,858)
Total non-financial assets 5,635,591 7,490,449 (1,854,858)
Departmental net financial position 4,464,498 5,533,498 (1,069,000)

CIHR’s net liabilities are made up of accounts payables and accrued liabilities, vacation pay and compensatory leave, deferred revenue as well as employee future benefits. The slight increase in total net liabilities of $0.5M is primarily due to an increase in the employee vacation accrual ($1.0M) as a result of increased salary rates and additional days leave granted in compensation for the Phoenix pay system, as well as small increases in accounts payable and accrued liabilities ($0.5M) which mainly relates to payables due to other government departments. These increases were offset by a decrease in deferred revenue ($1.0M) caused by both fewer donations received in the year and an increased use of prior year donations towards CIHR’s contributions to health research.

Net financial assets include amounts due from the Consolidated Revenue Fund and accounts receivable and advances. The $1.2M increase of net financial assets in 2019–20 is the result of a decrease in due from the Consolidated Revenue Fund of $0.6M, offset by a $1.8M increase to accounts receivable (decrease of $0.4M for external parties and increase of $2.2M for other government departments and agencies).

CIHR’s non-financial assets include prepaid expenses and tangible capital assets. The $1.9M decrease in non-financial assets is primarily due the decrease in net book value of tangible capital assets as a result of increased amortization and fewer acquisitions than in previous years. Prepaid expenses remained consistent year over year.

Additional information

Organizational profile

Appropriate minister: The Honourable Patty Hajdu, P.C., M.P.

Institutional head: Dr. Michael J. Strong, President

Ministerial portfolio: Health

Enabling instrument: Canadian Institutes of Health Research Act (S.C. 2000, c. 6)

Year of incorporation / commencement: 2000

Raison d’être, mandate and role: who we are and what we do

“Raison d’être, mandate and role: who we are and what we do” is available on the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s website.

For more information on the department’s organizational mandate letter commitments, see the Minister’s mandate letter.

Reporting framework

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s Departmental Results Framework and Program Inventory of record for 2019–20 are shown below.

Graphical presentation of Departmental Results Framework and Program Inventory

Long Description
Departmental Results Framework

Core Responsibility – Funding Health Research and Training

  • Departmental Result: Canada’s health research is internationally competitive

    Indicators:

    • Canada’s rank among G7 nations in share of health research publications
    • % of research involving international collaborations
    • Citation score of health research publications compared to the world average
  • Departmental Result: Canada’s health research capacity is strengthened

    Indicators:

    • $ co-invested by partners in health research
    • % of research that addresses sex or gender considerations
    • % of research investments addressing Indigenous health
    • % of the next generation of researchers that go on to work in a research position
  • Departmental Result: Canada’s health research is used

    Indicators:

    • % of federal health documents informed by research
    • % of research that informs patents
    • % of research contributing to improving health for Canadians

Program Inventory

Programs:

  • Investigator-Initiated Research
  • Training and Career Support
  • Research in Priority Areas

Internal Services

Supporting information on the program inventory

Financial, human resources and performance information for Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s Program Inventory is available in GC InfoBase.

Supplementary information tables

The following supplementary information tables are available on Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s website:

Federal tax expenditures

The tax system can be used to achieve public policy objectives through the application of special measures such as low tax rates, exemptions, deductions, deferrals and credits. The Department of Finance Canada publishes cost estimates and projections for these measures each year in the Report on Federal Tax Expenditures. This report also provides detailed background information on tax expenditures, including descriptions, objectives, historical information and references to related federal spending programs. The tax measures presented in this report are the responsibility of the Minister of Finance.

Organizational contact information

160 Elgin Street, 9th Floor
Address Locator 4809A
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0W9
Telephone: 613-954-1968
Toll Free: 1-888-603-4178
support-soutien@cihr-irsc.gc.ca

Appendix: definitions

appropriation (crédit)
Any authority of Parliament to pay money out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund.
budgetary expenditures (dépenses budgétaires)
Operating and capital expenditures; transfer payments to other levels of government, organizations or individuals; and payments to Crown corporations.
core responsibility (responsabilité essentielle)
An enduring function or role performed by a department. The intentions of the department with respect to a core responsibility are reflected in one or more related departmental results that the department seeks to contribute to or influence.
Departmental Plan (plan ministériel)
A report on the plans and expected performance of an appropriated department over a 3‑year period. Departmental Plans are usually tabled in Parliament each spring.
departmental priority (priorité ministérielle)
A plan or project that a department has chosen to focus and report on during the planning period. Priorities represent the things that are most important or what must be done first to support the achievement of the desired departmental results.
departmental result (résultat ministériel)
A consequence or outcome that a department seeks to achieve. A departmental result is often outside departments’ immediate control, but it should be influenced by program-level outcomes.
departmental result indicator (indicateur de résultat ministériel)
A quantitative measure of progress on a departmental result.
departmental results framework (cadre ministériel des résultats)
A framework that connects the department’s core responsibilities to its departmental results and departmental result indicators.
Departmental Results Report (rapport sur les résultats ministériels)
A report on a department’s actual accomplishments against the plans, priorities and expected results set out in the corresponding Departmental Plan.
experimentation (expérimentation)
The conducting of activities that seek to first explore, then test and compare the effects and impacts of policies and interventions in order to inform evidence-based decision-making, and improve outcomes for Canadians, by learning what works, for whom and in what circumstances. Experimentation is related to, but distinct from innovation (the trying of new things), because it involves a rigorous comparison of results. For example, using a new website to communicate with Canadians can be an innovation; systematically testing the new website against existing outreach tools or an old website to see which one leads to more engagement, is experimentation.
full‑time equivalent (équivalent temps plein)
A measure of the extent to which an employee represents a full person‑year charge against a departmental budget. For a particular position, the full‑time equivalent figure is the ratio of number of hours the person actually works divided by the standard number of hours set out in the person’s collective agreement.
gender-based analysis plus (GBA+) (analyse comparative entre les sexes plus [ACS+])
An analytical process used to assess how diverse groups of women, men and gender-diverse people experience policies, programs and services based on multiple factors including race ethnicity, religion, age, and mental or physical disability.
government-wide priorities (priorités pangouvernementales)
For the purpose of the 2019–20 Departmental Results Report, those high-level themes outlining the government’s agenda in the 2019 Speech from the Throne, namely: Fighting climate change; Strengthening the Middle Class; Walking the road of reconciliation; Keeping Canadians safe and healthy; and Positioning Canada for success in an uncertain world.
horizontal initiative (initiative horizontale)
An initiative where two or more federal organizations are given funding to pursue a shared outcome, often linked to a government priority.
non‑budgetary expenditures (dépenses non budgétaires)
Net outlays and receipts related to loans, investments and advances, which change the composition of the financial assets of the Government of Canada.
performance (rendement)
What an organization did with its resources to achieve its results, how well those results compare to what the organization intended to achieve, and how well lessons learned have been identified.
performance indicator (indicateur de rendement)
A qualitative or quantitative means of measuring an output or outcome, with the intention of gauging the performance of an organization, program, policy or initiative respecting expected results.
performance reporting (production de rapports sur le rendement)
The process of communicating evidence‑based performance information. Performance reporting supports decision making, accountability and transparency.
plan (plan)
The articulation of strategic choices, which provides information on how an organization intends to achieve its priorities and associated results. Generally, a plan will explain the logic behind the strategies chosen and tend to focus on actions that lead to the expected result.
planned spending (dépenses prévues)

For Departmental Plans and Departmental Results Reports, planned spending refers to those amounts presented in Main Estimates.

A department is expected to be aware of the authorities that it has sought and received. The determination of planned spending is a departmental responsibility, and departments must be able to defend the expenditure and accrual numbers presented in their Departmental Plans and Departmental Results Reports.

program (programme)
Individual or groups of services, activities or combinations thereof that are managed together within the department and focus on a specific set of outputs, outcomes or service levels.
program inventory (répertoire des programmes)
Identifies all the department’s programs and describes how resources are organized to contribute to the department’s core responsibilities and results.
result (résultat)
A consequence attributed, in part, to an organization, policy, program or initiative. Results are not within the control of a single organization, policy, program or initiative; instead they are within the area of the organization’s influence.
statutory expenditures (dépenses législatives)
Expenditures that Parliament has approved through legislation other than appropriation acts. The legislation sets out the purpose of the expenditures and the terms and conditions under which they may be made.
target (cible)
A measurable performance or success level that an organization, program or initiative plans to achieve within a specified time period. Targets can be either quantitative or qualitative.
voted expenditures (dépenses votées)
Expenditures that Parliament approves annually through an appropriation act. The vote wording becomes the governing conditions under which these expenditures may be made.
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