| Literature DB >> 26417451 |
Terry T-K Huang1, Emily Ferris1, Rachel Crossley2, Michelle Guillermin3, Sergio Costa1, John Cawley4.
Abstract
Public health leaders increasingly recognize the importance of multi-sector partnerships and systems approaches to address obesity. Public-private partnerships (PPP), which are joint ventures between government agencies and private sector entities, may help facilitate this process, but need to be delivered through comprehensive, transparent frameworks to maximize potential benefits and minimize potential risks for all partners. The City University of New York (CUNY) School of Public Health and the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation (HWCF) propose to engage in a unique academic-private-sector research partnership to evaluate the impact and effectiveness of the food and beverage industry's investment in obesity and hunger prevention and reduction through community-level healthful eating and active living programs. The CUNY-HWCF academic-private partnership protocol described here incorporates best practices from the literature on PPP into the partnership's design. The CUNY-HWCF partnership design demonstrates how established guidelines for partnership components will actively incorporate and promote the principles of successful PPPs identified in various research papers. These identified principles of successful PPP, including mutuality (a reciprocal relationship between entities), and equality among partners, recognition of partners' unique strengths and roles, alignment of resources and expertise toward a common cause, and coordination and delegation of responsibilities, will be embedded throughout the design of governance, management, funding, intellectual property and accountability structures. The CUNY-HWCF partnership responds to the call for increased multi-sector work in obesity prevention and control. This framework aims to promote transparency and the shared benefits of complementary expertise while minimizing shared risks and conflicts of interest. This framework serves as a template for future academic-private research partnerships.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26417451 PMCID: PMC4582737 DOI: 10.1186/s40608-015-0066-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Obes ISSN: 2052-9538
Fig 1Governance Structure. Figure 1 illustrates CUNY and HWCF’s specific governance and leadership roles within the CUNY-HWCF academic-private research partnership. An established governance structure recognizes partners’ unique roles and supports the delegation and coordination of responsibilities. The Independent Advisory Board, comprised of outside public health and management science experts, provides advice to support the partnership’s work and hold partners accountable to the agreed upon research framework