| Literature DB >> 27072802 |
Ermin Erasmus1, Uta Lehmann2, Irene Akua Agyepong3, John Alwar4, Don de Savigny5, Peter Kamuzora6, Tolib Mirzoev7, Nonhlanhla Nxumalo8, Göran Tomson9,10, Benjamin Uzochukwu11, Lucy Gilson12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The last 5-10 years have seen significant international momentum build around the field of health policy and systems research and analysis (HPSR + A). Strengthening post-graduate teaching is seen as central to the further development of this field in low- and middle-income countries. However, thus far, there has been little reflection on and documentation of what is taught in this field, how teaching is carried out, educators' challenges and what future teaching might look like.Entities:
Keywords: CHEPSAA; Capacity development; Course review; Health policy and systems research and analysis; Low- and middle-income countries; Post-graduate; Teaching
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27072802 PMCID: PMC4830003 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-016-0097-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Fig. 1The CHEPSAA partners
Fig. 2Collecting and analysing information on post-graduate teaching – process and focus
Key questions to address in supporting the development of post-graduate HPSR+A teaching
| Question 1: | This question is central to consideration of what is currently being taught under the label of HPSR+A , how this teaching is done and how it might look in future. CHEPSAA’s analysis suggests that such curriculum development needs to address issues such as the diverse student groups of HPSR+A courses, the variation in credit hours for HPSR+A subject matter, limited student-educator contact time and the large portions of time allocated to other tasks, and forms of teaching and assessment. The question encourages consideration of how these issues should be dealt with, what current practices should be carried over to the future, and how current approaches can be optimised and new ones encouraged. |
| Question 2: | CHEPSAA’s analysis shows that much HPSR+A teaching takes the form of courses that are situated in larger programmes such as MPH degrees, that they address diverse student audiences and that there is a large variety of courses with various degrees of HPSR+A focus. It is important, therefore, to think about the structures within which those courses fit. A key question in this regard is whether the field and its target audiences are best served through cross-cutting or more specialist courses. Teaching in a cross-cutting way will, for example, expose a wider range of students to the subject, while focused courses offer greater depth. |
| Question 3: | As is clear from the definition used in this work, HPSR+A defines itself as a multi-disciplinary field. It has also been shown that researchers and educators in the field often want to increase multi-disciplinary work, but face challenges in seeking to do this, including having too little time for the course materials they aim to cover without even bringing in materials and perspectives from different disciplines and limited cross-disciplinary connections within their institutions or links with potential collaborators from other disciplines [11]. Given HPSR+A’s commitment to multi-disciplinarity, it is important to consider how this principle is addressed and brought to life in current and future teaching. |
Examples of threshold concepts from CHEPSAA’s courses
| Threshold concepts shared across the courses | |
| • Health policies and systems are socially constructed; they exist within contexts and histories and are driven by and impact on a range of agents | |
| Selected threshold concepts unique to the courses | |
| Introduction to Complex Health Systems | Introduction to Health Policy and Systems Research |
| Health systems are integrative by nature, and consist of complex inter-relationships; we all have a role in the system | HPSR + A is intentionally multidisciplinary and embraces multiple perspectives |
| Health system effectiveness is a ‘whole system’ judgement rather than one based on the effectiveness of specific interventions | Health care services/interventions/programmes provide a lens through which to investigate policy and systems issues (i.e. they are not the primary focus of the research) |
| People make sense of the system around them and act based on their understandings and mind sets | Good (i.e. sound) research design requires that the study design fits the question, issues and purpose |
| Power is everywhere: in agency, service delivery and decision-making | There is no hierarchy of study design in terms of quality and rigour in HPSR + A; and quality and rigour are always important |
| Everyone has a part to play in the system, working towards shared goals | Researcher curiosity, attentiveness and reflexivity are the basis of rigorous HPSR + A |
| The health system is a complex adaptive system | Theoretical ideas and concepts have value (as a guide for study design and analysis in HPSR + A) |