| Literature DB >> 28281700 |
Abstract
The overall aim of the 2014 Consultation is to bring together internal and external partners to help shape the strategic direction for CAHRD over the 10 to 20 year horizon. Our strategic thinking will be guided by our vision of a healthy future for low and middle income populations and our mission to transform health systems to improve the health of these populations. Partnership between northern and southern institutions is integral to this work and critical in the consultation process. The Consultation considers four selected areas of the current work of CAHRD: Lung Health, Maternal & Newborn Health, Neglected Tropical Diseases, and Health Systems. We aim to foster dialogue and learning between these and across contexts and disciplines. The major challenges that will need to be addressed over the next 10 to 20 years will be scoped and pathways to possible solutions proposed. The overall vision is a process of co-production of knowledge.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 28281700 PMCID: PMC4699023 DOI: 10.1186/1753-6561-9-S10-S2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Proc ISSN: 1753-6561
Figure 3Defining Applied Health Research
Figure 4Defining Delivery
Figure 5Applied Health Research and Delivery informing each other
Figure 6The four Workstreams (Lung Health, Maternal & Newborn Health, Neglected Tropical Diseases, & Health Systems) in relation to the spectrum of Applied Health Research & Delivery.
Figure 1Co-production of knowledge (source: FutureEarth Research for Global Sustainability http://www.futureearth.info/who-we-are)
Figure 2Overview of process for CAHRD Consultation programme
Figure 7Examples of on-going activities co-ordinated by LSTM across the spectrum and in relation to Discovery, Translation, Evidence Synthesis
Figure 8Cross-cutting themes in relation to Workstreams and Discussion Papers
Figure 9Intersections between Workstreams and existing Applied Health Research and Delivery Activities
Summary of options for further growth and development of work within the four Workstreams
| Lung Health | i. Work towards better understanding of the health risks associated with Household Air Pollution (HAP), and what level of reduction of HAP is necessary to improve health. |
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| ii. Better evidence on which interventions for reducing household air pollution (technologies [e.g. stoves], fuels, ventilation, behaviour) are most effective at reducing HAP. | |
| iii. Community burden of chronic respiratory diseases in relation to epidemiological and socio-economic factors | |
| iv. Developing and testing health system diagnostic and clinical management pathways for patients with chronic cough, including provision for acute episodes | |
| v. Studies and systematic reviews of patient costs associated with chronic non-communicable respiratory disease | |
| vi. Work towards deeper understanding and effective measurement of catastrophic care-seeking costs | |
| i. The validity of MNH as a ‘litmus test’ for Universal Health Coverage (UHC) | |
| ii. Design and implementation of a single essential minimum health care package for mothers and babies, including understanding whether such package should include (e.g.) more gynaecological care, cancer screening & mental health | |
| iii. Models for the uptake, establishment and maintenance of audits of maternal deaths and stillbirths to improve quality of care, including new classification systems for attribution of cause of death and factors associated with death | |
| iv. Better understanding of the term “operations research” and more use of operations research in design and implementation of care packages to improve MNH | |
| i. A new suite of tools and approaches for: sensitive surveillance of NTD transmission, decision support technology to facilitate effective responses to surveillance data, reduction of transmission (both vector control and chemotherapy of infected individuals) | |
| ii. New, better integrated health systems and transmission models for local decision making in policy and practice, along with capacity to develop and use these models. | |
| iii. Developing packages of care for the management of disability and promotion of mental health for those who live with chronic disabling and disfiguring consequences of NTD. | |
| iv. Identifying and controlling disease in hard-to-reach foci, along with maintaining momentum | |
| i. Identifying best approaches to motivate, retain, and support different types of female and male close to community (CTC) providers as a key part of progress towards UHC | |
| ii. Working on opportunities for CTC providers to better address gendered social determinants of health at community level, and to promote effective multi-sectoral engagement | |
| iii. Developing human resource management systems, promoting health workforce supply, and improving health workforce performance in fragile and conflict-affected states (FCAS) | |
| iv. Wider use of a systematic, evidence-based approach for designing health research capacity strengthening (RCS) programmes, including implementation of common frameworks and use of monitoring indicators to capture impact on health systems and outcomes | |