Minutes from Global Goods Calls
Future Calls
The third Notice D Q&A teleconference will be hosted on Wednesday May 29, 2019 at 9am PST/ noon EST. Feel free to submit questions in advance at digitalsquare@path.org or on the #OAPNotice Slack Channel.
- Meeting URL: https://path.zoom.us/j/519832380
- Telephone: US: +1 669 900 6833 or 877 369 0926 (Toll Free)
- Meeting ID: 519 832 380
The fourth Notice D Q&A teleconference will be hosted on Wednesday June 12, 2019 at 9am PST/ noon EST. Feel free to submit questions in advance at digitalsquare@path.org or on the #OAPNotice Slack Channel.
- Meeting URL: https://path.zoom.us/j/735425818
- Telephone: US: +1 669 900 6833 or 877 369 0926 (Toll Free)
- Meeting ID: 735 425 818
May 15, 2019 Call | Notice D Q&A on Request for Application
Find the meeting recording and transcript here.
- In the concept note template, it includes a project description section. While entering the draft concept note into the platform, I noticed that there isn't a space to put that project description.
We have minimized the number of fields that are entered on the OAP platform. When people are reviewing concept notes, they will navigate to the templates uploaded for all the information, whereas the platform will just contain the five fields: title, two-sentence overview, executive summary, consortium team, and tagging.
- To confirm, in addition to entering the text into the executive summary and consortium team and other fields, we should also upload a Word or PDF version of the concept note that includes the project description?
Exactly.
- I am curious about the emphasis on point of service systems in the RFA. Is it just looking for clarity on that because there are obviously the other systems involved in these transactions? I think the way I was viewing it is that this may have an emphasis on systems that are actually being able to provide the service level data for a larger transaction to take place. Could you clarify that that's the case or if you're considering more broadly which systems are involved?
There are two focuses for this RFA - there's a primary focus and a secondary focus. The primary focus is the point of service contributing the data and the secondary focus is on the other infrastructure bits that we would need. We really do want to see as much data being able to come in and support that process for the point of service systems.
- Is it worth submitting applications for systems that are not providing that data?
Yes, if youâre saying youâd submit something for that right-hand side (of the PowerPoint diagram) it's worthwhile to do so. It might be a good idea to look at some of the other concept notes that are focused on the point of service systems and work with them to figure out how to align that work and present the secondary focus as a work package.
- As a work package within a proposal for one of the point of service systems?
Yes, or you could do it separately but just say this is addressing the secondary focus.
- Is the focus right now on health system monitoring for the different maturity models? Is that next in terms of standalone paired integration and then is there a specific focus on standalone right now?
No, realistically the integrated model is what we are aiming for, but we do want to have a steppingstone path to achieve that integrated solution. We recognize that the digital health infrastructure in a lot of countries is not at that point, however, the standalone and paired models are what are feasible today and in different contexts. So if you have for example, an EMR running in a health facility, you could also stand up either something like the tool stack that the PEPFAR DATIM team has and look at more of a standalone type system, or you could do the paired system with the directly reporting FHIR data into the FHIR data warehouse. I should also say these maturity models have only been discussed for the health monitoring data workflow. Thereâs a similar discussion on maturity models and scenarios for the convertible care. The clinical decision support is underway and ideally, weâll make sure that these align.
- Related to the point of service system, it seems that there are tools in content needed by point of service systems as well, not just the systems later in the HR process. I am curious about maybe the specific example that you would have. Is what's providing the metadata required that define exactly how point of service system should be structuring this content and reporting it? Because that's what happened prior to it being received by the HIV or a data warehouse which is referred to as the second step in the US. I'm envisioning an important role, especially as you move to later maturity models like a fully integrated one where you might have a winning service system like an electronic medical record is going to package up content and codes. That would potentially rely on you know external source for defining all that content.
Yes. So, the very short answers: that's in the DSS status sharing specification that defines for a minimum data set for a small set of indicators that can be used to calculate a small set of indicators. It also defines the terminologies or the FHIR value sets needed for the disaggregation. That is how it's all packaged together that particular FHIR resource for that packaging of the DSS as a measure. In that measure is where you can do the linking to the indicator definitions and terminologies. Not the full indicator definitions in terms of the calculations, but sort of the metadata on the version and whatnot. Then we combine in the clinical quality language which actually does the indicator calculations. That's a FHIR library resource that's referenced by the FHIR measure in there. We have the sequel code to do both indicator calculations and identify identification of population cohort. Inclusion exclusion criteria for calculating those indicators on as well as the data requirements for the minimum data set to find those examples of their examples of that is in the White Paper. For the appendix A if you want to see some more specific details on how that's coming together those examples are not fully complete and consistent yet, but they will be over the next few weeks.
- Do you have a definition that's available? For value sets that are embedded in the XML have a FHIR bundle or FHIR measure or as part of the in a sequel scripts, then you know that's certainly useful and there's some tools that could use it. But none of the point of service tools are really set up to use that content. They're meant to build up a bundle that would be sent to a FHIR service that's going to utilize that and so I'm wondering about providing value sets in terminology and other potentially structured metadata that would coordinate service systems are going to need in order, just to prepare that content, especially as they get more sophisticated and we move beyond the single indicator for improving this model.
There are a lot of implementation considerations that come into play there. So, I know of some systems out there that already have sort of generic FHIR synchronization services and would be within sort of the paired maturity scenario would theoretically just be able to say, âOkay, I'll sync to a FHIR server and I don't really have to do anything else. Let me just validate for these indicators that I'm actually collecting this data in the system and that I know I have clinical workflows that are reflective right and that's going to depend on the facility.â You know the clinical care that's provided at that facility so that there's a question of presence of data and then there's the presence of the ability to report the data in, in the case where we don't have that for HR7 FHIRâs capability in the point of service system directly in the FHIR library resources, the data requirement. Part is a structure definition that defines this is the data flow that you need. These are the data elements that you need it. You would then need a business analyst or one of your developers to map that back on to your data model and to do that process manually. And that's what this tool stack that the PEPFAR DATIM team is putting together and trying to develop.
We'd also like to take the opportunity to clarify this is only for one specific indicator; the PEPFAR viral load indicator is an important indicator and should be considered in your responses. However, what we do want to see is the capability of this to work readily for other indicators and not just for HIV but as well as for other health program areas. It does look likely that we will have additional funding beyond the currently available funding to consider use cases in the family planning and sexual reproductive health area. So even if your point of service system does not generally deal with HIV clinical workflows, that does not preclude you from applying and we do hope to identify additional funding for putting those core investments to support the points of certain systems to realize these workflows.
- Can the people who are developing the proof of concept note take the proof of concept into consideration when developing their concept note?
The people developing this tool stack from the PEPFAR DATIM team are doing it with funding that is not through Digital Square, but they are doing it in coordination with this announcement, and that's why they wanted to open up their internal development for feedback from you all.
- I was just wondering if the people who are in standalone health system stage can leverage this?
Yes, the tool stack. On the next slide, there is a link to the GitHub repo which currently has the CSV use case supported and their plans to work on the direct database connection and so that's all work that's in progress.
May 1, 2019 Call | Notice D Q&A on Request for Application
Find the meeting recording and transcript here.
Slight change in terminology: Notice D announcement referred to an âindicator constrained messageâ but the language has since changed to âminimum data set messageâ in the White Paper, which is currently still in draft.
- The RFA mentions that there are expectations that at least three different global goods will have implemented the CQF IDX solution through the funding. I want to confirm if âglobal goodsâ means point of service applications or if that could include three HIE/HMIS components?
Three point of service applications for that primary focus. There will be other global goods involved in the workflow on the right-hand side (of data workflow). We recognize that this is seed funding for approving out that concept and generating evidence and expect to be able to provide additional support internally from Digital Square to realize this whole workstream even if we focus on the primary on the left-hand side.
- Are we expected to upgrade FHIR to use version 4 or 5?
- If we submit the initial concept note draft within the first 4 weeks/by May 23rd, is our concept note still eligible?
- By saying âD0â does that mean that there are more RFAs coming under Notice D?
- For the OAP Portal, I clicked on âJoin Notice D to Create your Applicationâ and received a âPage not foundâ error. I want to make sure Iâm accessing the portal correctly.
- Is there a threaded discussion site where we can ask questions and get answers?
- Can Slack be used for questions?
- The White paper seems to be a moving target because itâs undergoing active work in the IHE community. Will respondents need to be following that progress to respond?
- Do we expect significant deviation in the structure or content of that White Paper?
- Are we freezing at a particular version of the White Paper?
- Regarding use cases, do we have to demonstrate meeting these requirements with an active PEPFAR or HIV project or do we just have to show capabilities?
- Should we focus on one indicator or discuss multiple indicators?
The next Notice D Q&A teleconference will be hosted on Wednesday May 15, 2019 at 9am PST/ noon EST. Feel free to submit questions in advance at digitalsquare@path.org or on the #OAPNotice Slack Channel.
- Meeting URL: https://path.zoom.us/j/332189523
- Telephone: 332 189 523
- Meeting ID: US: +1 669 900 6833 or 877 369 0926 (Toll Free)
September 4, 2018 Call | Notice C Q&A on Proposal Finalization Phase
- Where is the budget information submitted?
Use the template as a guideline and upload the budget narrative and complete budget as an attachment to the OPP&P site. There are specifically labeled boxes that indicate where to upload the budget and the narrative (please upload separately) and any further supporting documents.
- How do I know that the budget information is kept confidential?
When the budget is uploaded to the appropriate section on the OPP&P site, it is automatically set to private.
- How will the $100,000 and $800,000 pools of funding be split?
The Digital Square Governing Board will make the final decision on how the C1 and C0 funding will be split among the selected proposals. Digital Square recommends proposal submitters outline work packages and assign a cost to each workstream when fleshing out deliverables and the budget narrative; this is not mandatory but will allow the Board to easily tie funding to the proposal objectives.
- What is the expectation of the community feedback section?
The community feedback section gives submitters the ability to describe the community feedback received during the proposal co-creation phase and beyond. This is an opportunity to showcase how you plan to further engage the community (webinars, presentations, Q&As, etc.).
- Will the PRC and Board view the copy and paste version of the proposals or the PDF version?
The PRC typically reviews both versions of the proposal. The Governing Board will review print outs of the PDFs.
- If the name of a developing tool is unknown, should it be added to the appendix?
Yes, please add it to the appendix.
- What is the difference between the co-creation phase and the proposal finalization phase?
The co-creation phase provides a chance to collaborate with organizations and individuals within the digital community and develop consortium teams. Commenting and feedback sharing is locked once the co-creation phase is closed. Moving into the proposal finalization phase will allow submitters enough time to incorporate feedback received from the co-creation phase and avoid last-minute comments.
- Where do submitters upload the full proposal after the concept note phase ends?
After the concept note phase ends, submitters will then update the concept note with the remaining requirements. The original concept note submitted is meant to be later developed into a full proposal. Submitters can also attach the full proposal as a PDF in the "supporting documents" section.
- If a submitter is developing and building a new module, how should the self-assessment tool be used to measure maturity?
The self-assessment should be in terms of the overall software you are building upon, not the module. For example, if you are building a module expanding DHIS2, then you would determine maturity based on DHIS2.
- How should submitters determine if the tool is low, medium, or high on the self-assessment tool if it falls between the category descriptions? For example, "country utilization" states a tool is considered "low" if two or less countries utilize the tool and "medium" if at least four countries utilize the tool. How would the submitter determine the status if three countries utilize the tool? Will the level of maturity play into the Board decision on funding?
If the tool falls between two categories, round up. The intent of the maturity model is to highlight requested areas of investment. The Board will not choose funding solely on the assessment tool.
- Where are tutorials or instructions on how to register the tool with the Digital Health Atlas?
You can contact the product owner, Megan, via Slack. Digital Square will also add detailed instructions to the Wiki.
- Is it a requirement to have the tool registered with the Digital Health Atlas to be considered for Notice C funding?
Yes, it is required. Please register your tool on the Digital Health Atlas. Registering your tool on the Digital Health Atlas will allow us to see where the tool has been deployed, impact, and other opportunities.
- How detailed should the workplan and tasks be?
- Who is the point of contact for OPP&P site errors?
Upload screenshots of the error message to the Slack channel or email the team at digitalsquare@path.org.
- If approved for funding, how long after being notified can teams expect the contracting phase to start?
Contracting is on a case-by-case basis determined by the Digital Square Governing Board.
- If a proposal we uploaded to the OPP&P site and then the submitter decideds to make changes, will a new version of the proposal be re-uploaded?
If a submitter needs to make changes to a proposal already uploaded to the OPP&P site, there is an edit function that allows submitters to edit proposals directly on the site. However, a new PDF version will need to be uploaded to reflect changes.
July 12, 2018 Call | Notice C Q&A Part II
- Q: Is a new login needed to use the Digital Square Open Proposal Platform?
- A: Yes. In order to participate in Notice C you are required to submit a request for a new login on the Digital Square Open Proposal Platform. If you created a login for the Notice B cycle it will not transfer over to the new platform.
- Q: Is it possible to upload images to the new proposal site?
- A: Yes. Images can be included as attachments and/or embedded within concept notes.
- Q: How much funding is available in C0 and C1?
- A: C0 has $800,000 available for investment; C1 has $100,000 available for investment. Digital Square will continue to raise additional funds and co-investments from donors throughout the notice cycle.
- Q: For the C1 (OpenIMIS) RFA, are proposals that will further enhance OpenIMIS or field application/deployment of the OpenIMIS model desired?
- A: The goal is to identify potential clients to support the backend of insurance systems. There is an OpenHIE UHC/ Insurance subcommittee currently looking at different workflows and standards for claim submissions, eligibility, payments etc. the goal is for C1 awardees to support the longer term needs of OpenIMIS. Please read the OpenIMIS Roadmap for more details.
- Q: What are the definitions of the different types of awards?
- A: Status definitions:
- AwardedâFully funded: The proposal has been approved for the full amount requested.
- AwardedâPartially funded: The proposal was awarded but not at the full amount requested. However, additional investments need to be sought to fully fund the proposal. Submitters will not have to participate in next notice cycle and will be automatically considered in next round of funding.
- AwardedâPending funding: The proposal was approved by the governing board. However, funding is unavailable at the time of submission and Digital Square has prioritized this proposal for additional investments. Submitters will not have to participate in next notice cycle and will be automatically considered in next round of funding.
- Postponing for future calls: The submitter has voluntarily withdrawn the proposal from consideration in the present round of funding and has the option of re-submitting the same proposal in a future round.
- Review complete: The review of the proposal has completed and not resulted in funding.
- Out of Scope: The proposal is not eligible for funding consideration as it does not meet all requirements for consideration.
- A: Status definitions:
- Q: Will the submitters from Notice A and B that are âAwardedâPending Fundingâ be a part of the Notice C $800,000 funding? Or is there a separate funding round for the previously âAwardedâPending Fundingâ proposals?
- A: Proposals from Notice A and B that are âAwardedâPending Fundingâ will have a chance to receive funding from the Notice C cycle. Proposals from Notice A and B that are âAwardedâPartially Fundedâ will have a chance to receive additional funding from the Notice C cycle.
- Q: If I had a proposal submitted under Notice B that received a âAwardedâPending Fundingâ or âAwardedâPartially Fundedâ status will I need to resubmit a proposal?
- A: You do not need to resubmit your proposal as it will be automatically considered during the Notice C round of funding. If you do wish to update your proposal, note that any substantive changes to your proposal would trigger a need for a full review by the Peer Review Committee.
- Q: What types of donors are participating in the global good open proposal process?
- A: Traditional donors (Gates, USAID), family foundations, and the private sector. Digital Square is exploring all options and actively pursuing new types of donors; utilizing the donor investment principles to drive engagement.
- Q: Is the 15% cap on NICRA negotiable?
- A: The indirect cost maximum is based on the donor(s) investing for the Notice. 15% is the maximum indirect allowed under Notice C0.
- Q: Is a list of previously approved proposal funding amounts provided for reference?
- A: Previously approved funding amounts have not been shared.
- Q: Is there a requirement to collaborate with other organizations when submitting a concept note/proposal?
- A: Collaboration with other organizations is strongly encouraged but it is not required.
June 28, 2018 Call | Notice C Q&A Part I
- A list of changes from Notice B to Notice C:
- Notice C is hosted on Digital Squareâs Open Proposal Platform instead of UCSFâs.
- A tagging feature has been designed for a more productive collaboration effort.
- It is now a requirement to register your global good with the Digital Health Atlas .
- There are two announcements: C0 and C1 (general global goods and OpenIMIS).
- Additional information has been provided on the minimum requirement for a concept note to be considered âin scope.â
- Q: Should a concept note focus on relative tools and technology that will enhance existing global goods? A: A concept note should provide high-level information regarding your proposed idea and must have the following minimum requirements to be considered:
- executive summary,
- consortium team,
- product description, and
- tags.
- Q: If a proposal from Notice B was approved for future funding but not awarded, should the submitters of that note participate in the Notice C concept note phase? How should the concept note be updated? A: If your proposal was approved in Notice B and is being considered for the next round of funding, you do not need to resubmit a concept note because it is automatically considered for Notice C. However, if you would like to make updates to your proposal, please contact the Digital Square team via email or the #Notice-C Slack channel.
- Q: If additional partners are added to the consortium team on an accepted Notice B under consideration for future rounds of funding, is a new application required? A: Unless there is substantial change to the content of the proposal, there is no need to re-submit as the proposal has already been approved for funding.
- Q: What is the page limit for a concept note? A: The concept note should not exceed three (3) pages.
- Q: Is there a predictable funding and/or predictable procurement cycle? A: There is not a set amount of funding for each Notice. However, Digital Square is mandated to fundraise for global goods from different donors and continues to do so throughout the Notice process.
- Q: Is there a resource that indicates gaps or needs in digital health that can be addressed by opensource products? A: Nothing presently but it is a recognized need.
- Q: Where are previously funded proposals by Digital Square? A: The Digital Square Wiki lists previous proposals awarded in Notices A and B. Additionally, the University of California, San Francisco, platform has the award announcement for Notice B with hyperlinks to full proposals.
- Q: Are the proposals meant to enhance existing global goods or to create new global goods? A: The overarching goal of the Notice process is to further digital health technologies. Each announcement has its own set of requirements. For Notice C, C0 requires that the global good is an existing software that has been deployed in at least three (3) countries. For C1, the proposal must be interoperable with national health information systems and further the development of OpenIMIS, among others. Complete requirements and specifications on the purpose and requirements of each proposal can be found in each announcement.
- Q: Are the concept notes relative to technology or UX? A: The concept notes can be relative to both.
- Q: Can you revise a concept note once itâs been uploaded to the platform? A: Yes. You can revise your concept note until July 20 when the concept note phase closes at 5:00 pm EST. Please note there are no extensions on this deadline.
- Q: Is there an open communication channel for the community? A: Yes. There is a Notice C Slack channel, an email box (digitalsquare@path.org), and a communication button on the proposal platform home page that will give you information on the various additional ways to connect.
- Q: Is there a list of Peer Review Committee (PRC) members? What is the process of the committee? A: The list of PRC organizations is posted on the Digital Square Wiki and website. Once the application phase has closed, the PRC will review each proposal and provide feedback based on the requirements listed in each announcement and the prioritization framework. The outline of our framework is in the RFA and covers four areas: cost, technology, probability for success, and impact. The PRC will assign the proposal a status (green-, amber-, red-lit). The Governing Board will then review the feedback from the PRC and make a final funding decision.
- Q: Is there a minimum and maximum award for a proposal, or is it relative to each proposal scope? A: Awards are relative to each proposal scope and amount of funding available. When a proposal is accepted to move into the full application stage, a more detailed budget will be required. It is possible for the Board to approve parts of a proposal without approving the entire proposal. For reference, previous proposals ranged from $60,000 to $200,000.
- Q: Where is the OpemIMIS roadmap located? A: The Technical Roadmap is on the openIMIS Wiki
March 14, 2018 Call | Global Goods Prioritization Q&A
The meeting began with a review of the Global Goods Prioritization Presentation, followed by a Q&A Session.
- Q: Will submitters have access to the proposal scoring tools? A: No, Digital Square will consider making these available for future rounds.
- Q: Explain what is meant by LOE (level of effort) breakdown. A: LOE is a high-level estimate of the amount of time an individual will be spending on the project. For example, if someone will be spending all of their time on this project, their LOE would be 100%.
- Q: How is âindirectsâ defined? A: Digital Squareâs multi-donor platform utilizes the indirect rates of each donor organization as subject to the rules and regulations of our individual donors. Submitters will be provided information on indirect rates during the contracting process. Further guidance will be given when the full proposal and budget is requested with the specifics of that donors indirect policy.
- Q: How should submitters present the budget? A: On the open proposal website, there is an example of the budget template that should be used.
- Note: Digital Square is actively identifying new financial resources for this and future rounds of proposals
- Q: How much detail should be in the budget description? A: Please see the budget template on the platform for an example of the level of detail. Please be clear about who is doing what and how that aligns with the workplan and the scope presented.
- Q: Does the budget require real names or representative names? A: Representative names and/or titles are acceptable, however, we do ask that key personnel be named.
- Q: How should submitters frame the budget when it is unclear how much may be awarded? A: Digital Square will reference the submitted proposal to see the organization's budget for the full scope of services presented. Digital Square may fund the full, or a slightly reduced, scope. Please note that this is not the only opportunity to apply for funding. Digital Square continues to identify additional investments that would enable future funding opportunities.
- Q: Will submitters receive direct feedback on proposals after the proposal finalization stage? A: Noâsubmitters will not receive direct feedback from the PRC on the final proposal that is submitted.
- Q: What is the timeline for the proposal to be awarded? A: Digital Squareâs Peer Review Committee (PRC) will review proposals March 26 through April 12, 2018. Digital Square will then consolidate the PRC feedback, use the prioritization tools, and present the feedback to our Governing Board for final decision during the next Governing Board meeting in May 2018. Funding will be disbursed to awarded proposals after the Governing Board has voted.
- Q: Can major edits be made to the proposal at this stage? A: Yesâas long as the proposal is finalized and submitted by March 23. No edits can be made after March 23.
- Q: If there is a section in the proposal outline that is not applicable to our proposal (ex. use cases) what should be done?A: If a proposal section does not apply to you please write ânot applicable.â In the specific instance of use cases, feel free to add in details on how you are targeting members of your community.
- Q: The concept note outline does not seem to align with the proposal outline. Do I need to be changing the content from my concept note to match? A: Try to follow the proposal outline as closely as possible. It is expected that concept notes will be expanded to add the additional sections required in the proposal outline, e.g.,all of the information in the concept note should be in the proposal. If content is already included in the âproject descriptionâ that is requested elsewhere in the outline, please note in those sections that the response is captured in the project description so that reviewers will know you have not skipped over this section. Feel free to add additional headings to the outline if they are needed for your proposal.
- Q: Where are the WHO classification/assessments on digital health interventions? We were asked to refer to this in the proposal. A:You can find the WHO classification/assessments here.
- Q: Does the 15 page page limit include the budget and annexes? A: The 15 page limit does not include the budget or annexes, but it does include the budget narrative. Please treat the annexes as secondary sources of information, not primary sources of information, for the benefit of the PRC so they do not have to search for information.
- Q: Will there be an assessment around continuity/elevation of content from concept note to final proposal? A: No, the concept note phase is designed to be a light lift; it is an open and transparent process to generate dialogue around potential collaboration opportunities. The concept note phase was also an opportunity to identify any potential proposals that would be out of scope, so that teams would not spend a lot of time working on a proposal that would not qualify for funding.
- Q: What is the best channel for receiving updated information on Notice BâSlack or the wiki? A: Both! We aim to keep both platforms updated.
- Q: Summarize steps for the open proposal process. A: You can find the steps listed here. Note: There will be no extensions given on submission deadlines--no exceptions.
- Q: How many proposals will be green-lit? A: Digital Square does not have a target number of green-lit proposals as the color-status is assigned by the PRC based on the review criteria. The PRC will vote based on the proposal content. The Governing Board will then cast votes on green-lit and amber-lit proposals.
- Q: Does green-lit mean that a proposal will be funded? A: Green-lit means the proposal meets all of the criteria for funding. Note that the Governing Board does make a distinction of âgreen-lit--fundedâ and âgreen-lit--unfunded.â If the project is funded, it means Digital Square already has the money to support it. If the project is unfunded, it means Digital Square will prioritize these proposals in our fundraising efforts. Once the funding comes through that proposal will proceed.
- Q: Is there an expectation that submitters print the scorecard for self-assessment? A: No, the scorecard is for Digital Square to prepare information for the PRC and Governing Board meetings. The scorecard is one of three analytical tools within the prioritization framework. Submitters are expected to use the maturity model for self-assessment.
- Q: Will the review be split up among individual PRC members or do all PRC members review everything? A: Every organization on the PRC can submit ONE vote per organization per proposal (even if there are several representatives per organization). The PRC has already been heavily involved reviewing concept notes and have gone through the voting process once before. We do not anticipate any challenges in this regard.
January 3, 2018 Call | Update on Peer Review Process
- Welcome â Lauren Wall
- Why Digital Square updated the open proposals process â Carl Leitner
- We took feedback from the previous round of global goods submissions, Notice A. Thanks to that feedback we have designed a round that will provide more time for proposal development, provide feedback earlier, and identify potential duplicative work earlier.
- Digital Square prioritization
- Digital Squareâs Governing Board is currently developing a prioritization framework for global goods investments. We will share this if it is finalized for Notice B.
- Open Proposals Process:
- We are hosting this process online at: https://open-proposals.ucsf.edu/digital-square/notice-b
- You must request an account. You will be approved ~ 24 business hours.
- Please provide feedback on concept notes and proposals, as well.
Notice B Schedule
We will use the following schedule.
Step | Action | Deadline |
---|---|---|
Step 1: Concept note phase | Digital Square issues a call for proposals and submitters upload concept notes to Digital Squareâs public-facing platform. The Peer Review Committee (PRC) and other submitters can provide feedback, comments, suggestions, and identify potential areas for collaboration. | January 19, 2018 |
Step 2: Proposal co-creation phase | Moving forward with identified collaborators and using feedback from the concept note phase, submitters begin proposal development. Proposal submitters can post iterations of their proposal based on community feedback. The PRC and other submitters can provide feedback, comments, and suggestions on the posted proposals. | February 16, 2018 |
Step 3:Proposal finalization phase | Taking into account feedback, submitters finalize their proposal and budget and submit to the Digital Square platform. The budget is not shared publicly on the platform and the PRC sees only the high-level budget and LOE percentages. Submitters should also fill out a self-assessment of their tool using the Global Good Maturity Model. | March 2, 2018 |
Step 4: PRC review phase | The Peer Review Committee reviews proposals according to PRC criteria and votes on green-, amber-, or red-lit status. | March 23, 2018 |
Step 5: Board review phase | Digital Squares presents the proposals, budget, and PRC votes to the Governing Board, which votes for investment. | Mid-Apri |
Step 6: Award phase | The result of the Governing Board vote and PRC feedback are communicated to the submitters. | End of April |
We are currently in the concept notes phase. The concept note phase is detailed on the site when you click âAdd your proposalâ. It requests three pieces of information:
- Executive summaryâDescribe in two to three paragraphs, for a non-technical audience, the context under which this proposal or work plan is being submitted to the Digital Square and the expected outcomes.
- Consortium teamâDescribe in brief, the composition of the consortium, the skill sets each organization will bring to bear on the proposal or work plan. Identify the organizational management lead who will serve as the point of contact for the proposal or work plan. You can also indicate that you are looking for collaborators during the Concept Note phase.
- Project descriptionâProvide a few paragraphs describing the project/proposal/idea.
Open Proposal Process Q&A
- How can we complete self-assessments on the Global Goods Maturity Model? You can make a copy of the Google sheet and submit with a link or as an Excel document.
- Where can I find the Global Goods Maturity Model? Here. It is also accessible through our Wiki.
- How do I provide feedback on concept notes? Digital Square uses an open proposal process. You can create an account and provide comments and feedback on the posted proposals.
- Will my concept note and proposal get feedback? Digital Square cannot control the amount of feedback provided by other submitters. Digital Square does strive, however, to provide a minimum amount of feedback from the Peer Review Committee.
- What happens if my concept note or proposal receives conflicting feedback? Digital Square has no control over crowdsourced comments. In the event of conflicting comments, Digital Square can assist submitters choose the best way to proceed.
- What level of budget detail should be included in proposal budgets? The Governing Board should have an idea of how funding will be spent. The budget should be a line item budget that includes activities, travel, staffing, and LOE.
- Do all submitted concept notes progress to the proposal phase? Digital Square will not prevent the advancement of any concept notes into proposal phase unless they are clearly out of Digital Squareâs scope.
- Can my organization submit more than one concept note or proposal? Yes.
- What visibility do other submitters have into my concept note? All concept notes and proposals can be viewed by all other submitters. Digital Square encourages submitters to provide feedback on other concept notes and proposals and look for potential collaborators. Other submitters will not see any budget information. The PRC will see high-level budget and LOE only.
Notice B:
- Whatâs maximum duration of award? The longest duration is three years but practically submitters should expect one year.
- Is this an entry point into a larger funding stream? Digital Square expects that this is an entry point into longer-term funding and support, though this depends on type of proposal. There will be other rounds of funding available, and not applying in this round does not preclude you from applying for longer-term funding and support later.
- Does Digital Square have priority countries for global goods? No, except that tools should be appropriate for use in LMICs.
- Does Digital Square prefer to fund global goods that meet a certain maturity level? No. If this changes, we will share that update.
- Does Digital Square only invest in health? What about projects that cross domains? Digital Squareâs focus is health. If you are looking at something tangential and wish to seek funding from Digital Square, we recommend you focus on the crossover. Digital Square serves as DIALâs health sustainability advisory group and DIAL focuses on projects that are not health-specific.
- Is Notice B restricted to those organizations pre-approved from the previous BAA process? Notice B utilizes Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation funding and does not have restrictions on who can apply.
- Can we apply for back-funding? No.
- Must proposals focus on interoperability? No. Not focusing on interoperability will not preclude a concept note from funding. However, please note one area of the Global Goods Maturity Model is interoperability and interoperability is in line with Digital Squareâs mission.
- Where can I find information on global goods currently being funded by Digital Square? On our Wiki. Most of these investments were made with earmarked funding. Notice B does not use earmarked funds with the exception that they should be existing global goods.
- Should my concept note build off of global goods that Digital Square currently supports? This is not necessary, however we expect that proposals that leverage existing investments would be viewed favorably.