| Literature DB >> 31984205 |
Erica Breuer1, Charlotte Hanlon2,3, Arvin Bhana4,5, Dan Chisholm6, Mary De Silva7, Abebaw Fekadu8,9, Simone Honikman10, Mark Jordans2, Tasneem Kathree5, Fred Kigozi11, Nagendra P Luitel12, Maggie Marx1, Girmay Medhin13, Vaibhav Murhar14, Sheila Ndyanabangi15, Vikram Patel16, Inge Petersen5, Martin Prince2, Shoba Raja17, Sujit D Rathod18, Rahul Shidhaye19, Joshua Ssebunnya20, Graham Thornicroft2, Mark Tomlinson21, Tedla Wolde-Giorgis22, Crick Lund1,2.
Abstract
Collaborative research partnerships are necessary to answer key questions in global mental health, to share expertise, access funding and influence policy. However, partnerships between low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) and high-income countries have often been inequitable with the provision of technical knowledge flowing unilaterally from high to lower income countries. We present the experience of the Programme for Improving Mental Health Care (PRIME), a LMIC-led partnership which provides research evidence for the development, implementation and scaling up of integrated district mental healthcare plans in Ethiopia, India, Nepal, South Africa and Uganda. We use Tuckman's first four stages of forming, storming, norming and performing to reflect on the history, formation and challenges of the PRIME Consortium. We show how this resulted in successful partnerships in relation to management, research, research uptake and capacity building and reflect on the key lessons for future partnerships.Entities:
Keywords: Global health; Global mental health; Low- and middle-income countries; Partnerships
Year: 2018 PMID: 31984205 PMCID: PMC6980236 DOI: 10.1007/s40609-018-0128-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Soc Welf ISSN: 2196-8799
Fig. 1PRIME consortium theory of change
Fig. 2Cumulative PRIME partner collaborations on peer-reviewed publications before the partnership (up to 2010) and at the end of six years (up to 2017). Each line represents a collaboration between two partner organisations on a single peer-reviewed publication. If a paper had multiple co-authors at different partner organisations, there will be lines between each of the partner organisations
Governance groups in PRIME
| Name of | Main function | Frequency of meetings | Chairperson | Members |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PRIME Management Group | The decision making body of PRIME and ensuring the achievement of objectives | Quarterly with at least one face-to-face meeting per year | Chief Executive Officer | PRIME Chief Executive Officer (CL), Research Directors (VP, MT), Country Principal Investigators and Ministry of Health partners, 1 representative from each partner. Research Uptake Officer, Programme Manager |
| PRIME Management Team | Overall leadership and responsibility for the day to day management of the PRIME | Weekly | Chief Executive Officer | PRIME Chief Executive Officer (CL), Research Directors (VP, MT), Research Uptake Officer, Programme Manager |
| Consortium Advisory Group | Provided external guidance to the programme and reviewed programme of work and progress | Twice a year | Independent external | Ten inter-disciplinary senior research and policy experts, at least one from each participating country, who are independent of PRIME, funders and the PRIME Chief executive Officer (CL), Research directors (VP, MT), Research Uptake Officer, Programme Manager |
| Country Management Groups | Overall responsibility for the implementation of the programme in each country | Every 1–4 weeks | Country Principal Investigator | Country Principle Investigator(s), Ministry of Health partner. Country Project Manager |
| Community Advisory Board | Guidance and independent monitoring of the implementation of the programme in the (sub)district | 2–3 times per year | Independent external | Composition varies in each country but generally senior district Officials or community leaders, religious/faith leaders, traditional healers, people with lived experience of mental illness and/or their carers |
PRIME policies and strategies
| PRIME policies | Purpose | Developed by |
|---|---|---|
| Monitoring and evaluation framework | To measure the progress of the partnership against our stated impact, outcome and four outputs: management, research, research uptake and capacity building in the form of a logframe and theory of change ( | PRIME Management Team (PMT) with support from Centre for Global Mental Health and input from all partners |
| Research uptake strategy | To outline a strategy for systematically increasing the uptake of PRIME’s research in policy and practice by (1) increasing awareness amongst researchers and health practitioners about the impact of mental illness, and how this can be addressed by improving access to evidence-based mental health care; (2) to mobilise people affected by mental illness, their families and key community stakeholders to use PRIME research to advocate for scaling up evidence-based care for mental disorders; (3) to increase the public awareness and engagement with the research findings amongst civil society and the media, including policy champions; and (4) to guide policy makers and donors to utilise research, in particular the PRIME outputs, to scale up using evidence-based mental health systems, integrating mental health into routine primary and maternal health care | PMT based on a stakeholder analysis from all partners; input from all partners |
| Capacity building strategy | To outline PRIME’s capacity building approach which aims to build sustainable capacity for health research and evidence-informed policy and planning at individual, organisational and system levels. Specifically, (1) to establish each partner organisation as leaders in mental health services research which will continue beyond the life of PRIME; (2) establish collaborative teaching programmes and jointly apply for further research grants; (3) to establish a broad-based, sustained, collaboration between the PRIME partners; and (4) to ensure that each institution will be able to better support high-quality research, independently secure research funding in competition with northern institutions, establish resources for national and regional capacity building and contribute to the needs of other partner institutions | PMT with Ritsuko Kakuma (now Centre for Global Mental Health, London) based on a capacity building needs and skills assessment at individual, organisational institutional and Ministry of Health levels from all partners; input from all partners |
| Publication policy | To make explicit PRIME’s approach to data storage, data access and sharing, and publication procedures during the life of PRIME by providing (1) a fair and transparent process for publishing outputs from PRIME; (2) ensuring the timely production of high-quality research outputs, (3) building capacity of junior researchers; and (4) collaborating and sharing data to ensure the maximum impact of the PRIME’s work. This includes a transparent intention to publish process where lead authors specified the paper they wanted to publish in collaboration with co-authors, the research question, data analysis approach and target journal | PMT based on the Aspen/Indigo ( |
| Expression of interest policy | To provide a clear process for assessing the potential collaborations of parties interested in PRIME through a centralised application process linked to our website and administered by the PRIME Management Team | PMT with input from all partners |
Fig. 3First authorship of PRIME Publications during the first six years of the grant (1 May 2011–30 April 2017). The asterisk indicates junior authors defined as those who have no PhD or graduated less than five years ago and are not a principal investigator on PRIME
Fig. 4Average percentage of authors per publication by HIC and LMIC during the first six years of the grant (1 May 2011–30 April 2017)