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Defining Health Research for Development: The perspective of stakeholders from an international health research partnership in Ghana and Tanzania.

Authors :
Ward, Claire Leonie
Shaw, David
Anane-Sarpong, Evelyn
Sankoh, Osman
Tanner, Marcel
Elger, Bernice
Source :
Developing World Bioethics. Dec2018, Vol. 18 Issue 4, p331-340. 10p. 1 Diagram, 1 Chart.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

<bold>Objectives: </bold>The study uses a qualitative empirical method to define Health Research for Development. This project explores the perspectives of stakeholders in an international health research partnership operating in Ghana and Tanzania.<bold>Methods: </bold>We conducted 52 key informant interviews with major stakeholders in an international multicenter partnership between GlaxoSmithKline (GSK, Vaccine Developer) and the global health nonprofit organisation PATH and its Malaria Vaccine Initiative program (PATH/MVI, Funder-Development Partner), (RTS, S) (NCT00866619). The respondents included teams from four clinical research centres (two centres in Ghana and two in Tanzania) and various collaborating partners. This paper analyses responses to the question: What is Health Research for Development?<bold>Results: </bold>Based on the stakeholders' experience the respondents offered many ways of defining Health Research for Development. The responses fell into four broad themes: i) Equitable Partnerships; ii) System Sustainability; iii) Addressing Local Health Targets, and iv) Regional Commitment to Benefit Sharing.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Through defining Health Research for Development six key learning points were generated from the four result themes: 1) Ensure there is local research leadership working with the collaborative partnership, and local healthcare system, to align the project agenda and activities with local research and health priorities; 2) Know the country-specific context - map the social, health, legislative and political setting; 3) Define an explicit development component and plan of action in a research project; 4) Address the barriers and opportunities to sustain system capacity. 5) Support decentralised health system decision-making to facilitate the translation pathway; 6) Govern, monitor and evaluate the development components of health research partnerships. Overall, equity and unity between partners are required to deliver health research for development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14718731
Volume :
18
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Developing World Bioethics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133560861
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/dewb.12144