Healthcare Information For All by 2015

Healthcare Information For All by 2015 (HIFA2015) is a global network of health professionals, producers of reference and learning materials, librarians, technologists, researchers, and policymakers. They have over 6000 members from 2000 separate organisations in 167 countries worldwide.

HIFA2015 was formally launched in October 2006 at the 10th Congress of the Association for Health Information and Libraries in Africa in Mombasa, Kenya. The network is administered by the Global Healthcare Information Network, a nonprofit organisation based in the United Kingdom. Universal and user-friendly access to relevant, reliable health information is considered a vital part of meeting the World Health Organization's goal of Health For All and the United Nation's Millennium Development Goals.

Mission
In 2007, HIFA2015 members developed organisational goals, which include the goal that "By 2015, every person worldwide will have access to an informed healthcare provider." The HIFA2015 definition of "healthcare provider" includes citizens as well as health workers, recognising the importance of parents, children and families as providers of care, especially in low-income countries where health workers may be absent or hard to reach. This goal is supported by more than 170 health and development organisations, including the British Medical Association; BioMed Central; CAB International; Cochrane Collaboration; Hesperian Foundation; ICCDR, B; International Confederation of Midwives; International Council of Nurses; London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine; Medical Library Association; Partners in Health; Partnerships in Health Information; Public Library of Science; Royal College of Midwives; Royal College of Nursing; Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists; The Joanna Briggs Institute; THET; and Wikimedia Canada.

HIFA2015 has a sister network, CHILD2015, which focuses on child health and rights. CHILD2015 has 2500 international child health professionals and other professionals, with the goal that "By 2015, every child worldwide will have access to an informed healthcare provider." CHILD2015 is administered jointly by Global Healthcare Information Network, International Child Health Group (Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health), and International Society for Social Pediatrics and Child Health.

Each year, the campaign addresses the information needs of a particular group of healthcare providers, including: In November 2009, the Global Healthcare Information Network and ePORTUGUESe (World Health Organization) launched a Portuguese version of HIFA2015. HIFA2015–Portuguese has more than 1800 members in the eight Portuguese-speaking countries (Angola, Brazil, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Portugal, São Tomé and Príncipe, Timor-Leste), which have a combined population of 240 million people.
 * 2008–15: Medical, nursing and midwifery students
 * 2009–15: Nurses and midwives
 * 2010–15: Community health workers
 * 2011–15: Mothers and family caregivers
 * 2012–15: Citizens, mothers and families
 * 2013–15: Users and prescribers of medicines

In June 2010, the Positive Practice Environments Campaign, hosted at the International Council of Nurses in Geneva, officially incorporated the HIFA2015 Fact Sheet: Meeting the information needs of health professionals into their campaign materials to empower health workers worldwide to deliver evidence-informed health services to the global population.

In October 2010, the Global Healthcare Information Network and the Evidence-Informed Policy Network at the World Health Organization in Geneva launched a French-speaking version of HIFA2015 with a focus on the information needs of policy makers for health in francophone Africa.

In May 2011, the British Medical Association hosted the first international HIFA2015 Conference. Virginia Barbour, Editor-in-Chief of PLoS Medicine, said, "It is a shameful fact that in 2011 people are still dying because their healthcare workers don’t have access to the information they need."

In May 2011, HIFA-Zambia was launched in collaboration with the Zambia UK Health Workforce Alliance.

From January to September 2011, HIFA2015 underwent an external evaluation funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, which concluded: “HIFA2015 achieves an extraordinary level of activity on minimal resources from which many people around the world benefit".

In the summer of 2012, the European Association of Science Editors (EASE) formally became a new HIFA2015 Supporting Organization. EASE supports the global initiative by advising authors to make abstracts of their papers highly informative, reliable, and easily understandable (see EASE Guidelines for Authors and Translators of Scientific Articles).

Funding
HIFA2015 is currently supported (2013) by financial contributions from the British Medical Association (main funder), Anadach Group, BioMed Central, CABI, Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, Global Health Media Project, Global HELP, Haiti Nursing Foundation, Health Sciences Online, Instituto de Cooperación Social INTEGRARE, International Child Health Group (Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health), International Confederation of Midwives, Joanna Briggs Institute, Medical Aid Films, Network for Information and Digital Access, NextGenU.org, Partnerships in Health Information, Public Library of Science, Royal College of Nursing, UnitedHealth Chronic Disease Initiative.