| Literature DB >> 29132436 |
Maarten Olivier Kok1,2, John Owusu Gyapong3, Ivan Wolffers4, David Ofori-Adjei5, Elis Joost Ruitenberg6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: At the turn of the 90s, studies showed that health research contributed little to health and development in low- and middle-income countries because it was oriented towards international priorities and dominated by researchers from the North. A new approach to North-South collaboration was required that would support demand-driven and locally led research in the South. The aim of this study was to analyse the development and functioning of a programme for demand-driven and locally led research in Ghana that was supported by a North-South collaboration.Entities:
Keywords: Capacity strengthening; Contribution mapping; Health research system; Multilevel; North–South collaboration
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29132436 PMCID: PMC5683379 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-017-0251-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Fig. 1Multilevel research system
Fig. 2Programme cycle of the HRDP
Fig. 3The number of submitted letters of intent, full proposals and funded studies
Fig. 4The number of new applicants that submitted a proposal per year
| 1) | Communication and community participation Specific needs: health education approaches in Ghana, beliefs relating to health and prevention, evaluation of existing communication approaches and related interventions in the field of the Priority Health Service Interventions, piloting community involvement in policy formulation, planning, implementation and evaluation at district level, and institutionalising community involvement. |
| 2) | Quality of healthcare Specific needs: staff attitude, referral system, assurance of technical skills of providers, drugs and logistics management, and monitoring and confronting antimicrobial resistance. |
| 3) | Financing of healthcare Specific needs: managing internally generated funds, improving management, formal and informal charges, pricing of drugs and services, introducing standardised pricing, comparative prices in private and public sectors, exemptions, especially for the poorest and most vulnerable, and cultural- and gender-sensitive mechanisms to target the truly indigent and most vulnerable clients. |
| 4) | Decentralisation of healthcare Specific needs: multi-sector coordination, integrating funding and balancing national and local priorities. |