| Literature DB >> 28596910 |
M Sharma1, B Razzaque2.
Abstract
The South Asian Hub for Advocacy, Research and Education (SHARE) was a five-year National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)-funded program that aimed to stimulate the research base for task-shifting mental health interventions to address the mental health treatment gap in low and middle-income countries. During its 5 years (2011-2016) SHARE made notable accomplishments, including providing 20 studentships for short courses and ten fellowships to conduct mentored study, developing a new humanitarian research training course, implementing distance learning courses, creating an online repository of training materials, creation of a network of public health researchers at different career stages in South Asia, strengthening of partnerships amongst institutions of SHARE network and supporting its member's to produce peer reviewed publications. Furthermore, additional research capacity building and research grants leveraged on SHARE network were secured. The salient lessons learned in the 5-year program were that research capacity-building opportunities need to be tailored to the local context, as SHARE sought to develop and support courses that can build the capacities in specific areas identified as weak in the South Asian region. Mentoring was recognized as a critical component for which innovative and effective models of mentoring in the region need to be developed. Diverse platforms and mediums ought to be utilized to deliver the research training programs. Finally, research capacity-building program requires collaborative efforts of multiple stakeholders working locally, nationally and globally to attain the maximum impact in a region.Entities:
Keywords: Capacity-building outcomes; South Asia; low- and middle-income countries; research capacity building; teaching and learning
Year: 2017 PMID: 28596910 PMCID: PMC5454785 DOI: 10.1017/gmh.2017.5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Ment Health (Camb) ISSN: 2054-4251
Research capacity-building activities of SHARE (2012–2017)
| Research capacity-building activity | Objective, description | Recipient of opportunity | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studentships | Objective: To build capacity in young and mid-level researchers from the region through participation in annual short courses conducted by SHARE institutions | The applicants and awardees for this program were mainly early career professionals associated with SHARE network institutes, with at least a graduate degree in a health science-related discipline and an interest in working in mental health |
Seventeen researchers associated with SHARE network successfully completed the courses offered by SHARE network Three South Asia-based courses were offered:
Leadership in mental health Development and Evaluation of Complex interventions Qualitative methods for health research and medical discourse |
| Studentship awardees were selected on competitive basis | |||
| Fellowships | Objective: To build capacity in researchers associated with SHARE network, to carry out mentored research in a topic of their choice relevant to the overall goals of SHARE. | Fellows were early/middle career professionals associated with SHARE institutes, with at least a graduate degree in a health science-related discipline, 2 years of work experience in public health in South Asia, and had defined interest in building research career in mental health in South Asia |
Seven researchers successfully completed their study under mentorship of a senior SHARE researcher Three Publications in scientific journals (weblink Two publications are in preparation Two fellows won grants to scale up their work of fellowship study in their region |
| Mentors were the senior/middle level researchers associated with SHARE network, who had the expertise and experience of working in mental health in South Asia. | |||
| A list of mentors was prepared and the fellows found a match by sending request to the mentors. | |||
| Fellows were selected on competitive basis | |||
| Mental health services research in humanitarian context’ | Objective: To produce a cohort of skilled researchers and practitioners able to make a significant contribution to mental health research in a humanitarian context in the South Asia region. This course was developed by SHARE partners, University of Liverpool, Johns Hopkins University, Institute of Psychiatry Pakistan. It is a 2 years long course, spread over four module – weekly classroom-based teaching every 6 months delivered in Pakistan Salient features:
Research-led, thereby evolution of research projects drove the course Enquiry-based, engaging with course content through participatory train Cascade training model – Training of Trainers ToT model Online learning environment to support of the participants in between modules | The applicants and awardees for this program were mainly early career professionals associated with SHARE network One cohort – comprising of 8 participants. Six from Pakistan, one from Sri Lanka and one from Nepal |
Classroom-based modules delivered All participants have successfully completed qualitative assessments in a range of settings: Swat Valley, Peshawar in Pakistan, Islamabad/Pindi in Pakistan, Northern Sri Lanka in an area only recently made accessible again following conclusion of the war, Chitwan district of Nepal All participants have completed work on reports for module 1,2 and 3. Work underway on their trail designs One publication in scientific paper Two other publications are in preparation Three additional small grants for support of the SHARE course ‘Mental Health services research in Humanitarian context’ course Local capacity building – 30 people trained in needs assessment in humanitarian context according to DIME in workshops and seminar |
| Distance learning course ‘Implementation science for Public Health Interventions’ | Objective: The course aimed to provide a systematic framework for implementation and evaluation of public health interventions. | Public health professionals working in LMICs, with a year of work experience in implementation project in health/development sector. |
Twelve public health professionals working in LMIC s completed the first batch of course in Oct. 2014 Course team has modified the course (based on feedback from first batch) and revised course is expected to be live by first quarter of current year available to participants around the world, who are eligible and interested in the course |
| This course was developed in a distance learning format, with combination of online audio and video lectures, interactive discussion board, electronically submitted assignments and recommended readings | First batch had 14 participants associated with NIH collaborative hubs only | ||
| Online repository ‘Super course lectures on Global mental health’ | Objective: To create an online repository of lectures on mental health research that is available in open-access format and can be incorporated into any capacity-building program around the world. | Open and free access to researchers around the world |
Eleven lectures have been uploaded on the course website (Course weblink Some more lectures are in the process of being uploaded |
| This online repository is hosted as a part of supercourse library of lectures on global health. SHARE and another NIH hub ReDeAmericas are working in collaboration to develop the lectures for mental health repository | |||
| Online discussion forum | Objective: To provide mental health researchers from SHARE institutions with support, guidance and the opportunity for networking with peers and mentors. | Access was restricted to members associated with SHARE network institutes | This forum was closed due to the non-participation by the members |
| The membership of this online forum was restricted to only those who are associated (working) with the SHARE network institutes. | |||
| The forum was moderated by a senior/middle career researcher from the SHARE network on a monthly rota basis |