How We’re Searching for the Best Ways to Help in 2026

By GiveWell @ 2026-06-01T15:22 (+34)

This post was originally published on the GiveWell blog. You can view the original version here.

This year, our research team is focused on two primary goals. The first is to scale our capabilities so we’re able to move much more donor funding to highly cost-effective programs in the next few years. The second is to grant at least $500 million to the best opportunities we can find this year to save and improve lives.

Over the past several years, GiveWell has doubled the size of our research team to deepen and broaden our search for highly impactful programs. Our 60 researchers are now distributed among 11 subteams that cover a number of global health and development cause areas, as well as core research needs.

Below you’ll find a summary of the key approaches each subteam is using this year to find new opportunities to help people in need as much as we can.

Malaria

People: Marinella Capriati, Zoe Hartman

Malaria, which is caused by a parasite transmitted when people are bitten by infected mosquitoes, is a leading cause of death globally, especially for young children in Africa, who make up around 70% of the approximately 600,000 malaria deaths worldwide each year.[1] While malaria prevention has long been a focus for GiveWell, the growing capacity and specialized expertise on our malaria team are allowing us to take on this challenge now in a way that would not have been possible even a few years ago. Our malaria research subteam, with 15 people, is the largest of our research teams and is divided into three subteams.

Antimalarial Medicines

People: Sarah Tougher, Robin Dey, Sam Aman

The Antimalarial Medicines subteam focuses on medicines that either prevent or treat infections from malaria parasites. Prevention and treatment are managed as an integrated portfolio because they use the same products, and programming and policy decisions in one area have direct implications for the other. For example, decisions about which antimalarial to use in one intervention may have potential implications for drug resistance in another. In 2026, the team plans to focus on the following:

Malaria Vector Control

People: Alex Bowles, Jenna Amlani, Rosie Bettle, Sarah Eustis-Guthrie, Nat Puapattanakajorn

The Malaria Vector Control subteam researches and funds cost-effective programs that prevent malaria infections and deaths by targeting the mosquitoes that transmit the disease. To date, most of the subteam’s work has supported the procurement and distribution of insecticide-treated nets through campaigns. The team plans to focus on the following:

Malaria Cross-Cutting Research

People: John Macke, James Watson, Kartik Sharma, Lucy McNamara, Giselle Gray

The Malaria Cross-Cutting Research subteam aims to improve GiveWell’s malaria grantmaking by asking high-level research questions, particularly focusing on ways that our current approach may be wrong and other strategies we could try. The team plans to focus on the following:

Nutrition

People: Alice Redfern, Andrew Martin, Catherine Hollander, Jack Clift, Jordan Hebert, Madison Stieg, Stephan Guyenet, Zach McLeod

Nutritional deficiencies are common in low- and middle-income countries and can cause a variety of symptoms, including increased susceptibility to infection and death. The Nutrition subteam researches and funds cost-effective programs to address problems like vitamin A deficiency, anemia, and acute malnutrition. We expect that up to half of the team’s grantmaking in 2026 will be renewal grants; the rest will be new grantmaking in areas where we are in the process of developing program pipelines. The team plans to focus on the following:

Vaccination

People: Natalie Crispin, Isabel Vasquez, Sarah Carson, Vicky Yu

Vaccines are very effective at preventing deadly diseases and they receive substantial global funding. Because of this, in most low- and middle-income countries the vaccines children need are available, yet not all children receive them. We currently have one Top Charity, New Incentives, focused on providing caregiver incentives and a growing portfolio of grants supporting programs that provide vaccination outreach to remote communities. We expect to use what we learn from the operational and impact data generated by those programs to improve our grantmaking and identify opportunities where additional funding can meaningfully increase vaccination rates and save lives. The team plans to focus on the following:

Water

People: Erin Crossett, Karin Mason, Megan Morris

More than a billion people around the world lack access to uncontaminated drinking water, and according to the World Health Organization, more than 500,000 people die each year from diseases caused by contaminated water.[2] This year, we expect to pivot from a narrow focus on chlorination to explore alternative treatment technologies and delivery models. This means accepting higher uncertainty in exchange for the potential to unlock high-impact opportunities that need substantial amounts of funding. Our strategy is intentionally fluid; we’re prioritizing rapid learning through quick evidence assessments and expert consultations. The team plans to focus on the following:

Livelihoods

People: Adam Salisbury

In late 2025, we began to focus more attention on programs that increase the economic well-being of people in extreme poverty. Our goal for the next two years is to test the hypothesis that GiveWell ought to expand its portfolio of livelihoods grants. We’re planning to cover a lot of ground in 2026, prioritizing program areas that could unlock significant funding opportunities if the general case for philanthropic investment seems promising. The team plans to focus on the following:

New Areas

People: Dan Brown, Daniel Issing, Dilhan Perera, Kim Vidal, Meika Ball, Rachel Mitchell

The New Areas subteam researches and funds cost-effective programs in global health and development that fall outside the scope of the other research subteams, such as diarrhea treatment and screening, and treatment for tuberculosis or syphilis. This year, the subteam aims to increase its grantmaking by about 20% over 2025 while broadening the cause areas and types of intervention that GiveWell funds. To accomplish this, we will be intentionally accepting higher levels of risk and uncertainty. We believe doing so will reduce the chance of missing highly cost-effective programs that need significant future funding and will provide additional opportunities to learn. The team plans to focus on the following:

Cross-Cutting Research

People: Alex Cohen, Brendan Phillips, Brian Gill, Jane Fortson, Katie Skoff, Mark Walsh, Steven Brownstone

The Cross-Cutting team supports research quality across GiveWell. As the organization scales this year—making more grants to more programs—we’re working to maintain the quality of our work and respond to important research questions that apply across our grantmaking. The team plans to focus on the following:

Research Support and Operations

Two of our research subteams are devoted to supporting the smooth running of the research team as a whole. Our Research Operations subteam provides logistical and knowledge management support. Our Commons team vets research materials and provides other research support as needed.

Research Operations

People: Hannah Bell, Destiny Clark, Kaitlynn Lagman, Matt Wang

The Research Operations subteam provides support for team tools and processes, including forecasting, project tracking infrastructure, international travel, external feedback on our grant processes, and internal coordination. The subteam plans to focus on maintaining and improving research team processes and resources to accompany research team growth, including:

Commons

People: Nicole Zok, Kameron Smith, Ally Rome, Andrew Ligon, Annie Barnett, Beatrix Swanson, Brooke Reaves, Gurmukh Singh, Jack Shangraw, Meghna Ray, Peter Namie, Sophia Emmons-Bell

The Commons subteam supports grantmaking volume, quality, and transparency across GiveWell by vetting research materials, including grant pages and cost-effectiveness models, and by providing other research support. This year, the subteam will focus on:

Notes

↑1See the WHO fact sheet on malaria, which states “Globally in 2024, there were an estimated 282 million malaria cases and 610 000 malaria deaths in 80 countries…the WHO African Region was home to 95% of malaria cases (265 million) and 95% (579,000) of malaria deaths. Children under 5 accounted for about 75% of all malaria deaths in the Region.” 75% * 95% = 71%.
↑2See the WHO fact sheet on drinking water, which states “Microbiologically contaminated drinking water can transmit diseases such as diarrhoea, cholera, dysentery, typhoid and polio and is estimated to cause approximately 505 000 diarrhoeal deaths each year.”
↑3See more on cash transfers in our GiveDirectly Cash for Poverty Relief intervention report here.
↑4See key evidence for ultra-poor graduation programs in Banerjee et al. 2021 and Banerjee et al. 2015.


 

  1. ^

    See the WHO fact sheet on malaria, which states “Globally in 2024, there were an estimated 282 million malaria cases and 610 000 malaria deaths in 80 countries…the WHO African Region was home to 95% of malaria cases (265 million) and 95% (579,000) of malaria deaths. Children under 5 accounted for about 75% of all malaria deaths in the Region.” 75% * 95% = 71%.

  2. ^

    See the WHO fact sheet on drinking water, which states “Microbiologically contaminated drinking water can transmit diseases such as diarrhoea, cholera, dysentery, typhoid and polio and is estimated to cause approximately 505 000 diarrhoeal deaths each year.”

  3. ^

    See more on cash transfers in our GiveDirectly Cash for Poverty Relief intervention report here.

  4. ^

    See key evidence for ultra-poor graduation programs in Banerjee et al. 2021 and Banerjee et al. 2015.


SummaryBot @ 2026-06-01T21:16 (+2)

Executive summary: GiveWell outlines its 2026 research agenda across 11 subteams, with the dual goals of scaling research capacity and granting at least $500 million to the most cost-effective global health and development programs it can identify.

Key points:

  1. GiveWell's 60-person research team is organized into 11 subteams covering malaria, nutrition, vaccination, water, livelihoods, and other global health cause areas.
  2. The malaria team—GiveWell's largest subteam at 15 people—plans to investigate chemoprevention approaches beyond the Sahel and cost-effective ways to support malaria treatment, following funding gaps created by changes to the global funding landscape.
  3. The water team received significant negative updates on adherence from external coverage surveys of chlorination programs in Uganda and Malawi, and is pivoting to explore alternative treatment technologies and delivery models.
  4. The New Areas subteam plans to increase grantmaking by about 20% over 2025 by intentionally accepting higher levels of risk and uncertainty, including in cause areas GiveWell has not previously funded such as medical oxygen, tuberculosis, and AI applications to global health.
  5. The livelihoods team aims over two years to test the hypothesis that GiveWell ought to expand its portfolio of livelihoods grants, covering cash transfers, ultra-poor graduation programs, and microfinance.
  6. The Cross-Cutting Research team is rolling out AI tools for use cases such as literature reviews and systematically tracking how well AI performs at GiveWell's work, with the goal of preparing for future jumps in AI capability.

 

 


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