| Literature DB >> 34026053 |
Asm Shahabuddin1, Alyssa Sharkey1, Faraz Khalid2, Kumanan Rasanathan3, Andreas Hasman4, Nhan Tran5, Ayesha Durrani6, Kennedy Ongwae7, Richard Duncan8, Khawaja Aftab Ahmed6, Saadia Farrukh4, Paul Rutter4, Debra Jackson1,9, Assad Hafeez10, Stefan Swartling Peterson11, Abdul Ghaffar5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Embedded implementation research (IR) can play a critical role in health systems strengthening by tackling systems and implementation bottlenecks of a program. To achieve this aim, with the financial support of GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance, in 2016, the Government of Pakistan, UNICEF and the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research (AHPSR) launched an Embedded IR for Immunisation Initiative (the Initiative) to explore health systems and implementation bottlenecks, and potential strategies to tackle such bottlenecks in the Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI) in Pakistan. In total, 10 research teams were involved in the Initiative, which was the first of its kind in the country. In this paper, we provided a brief overview of the Initiative's approach as well as the key learnings including challenges and successes of the research teams which could inform future embedded IR Initiatives.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34026053 PMCID: PMC8109843 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.11.06003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Steps and key milestones of the implementation research initiative.
Implementation research thematic areas, research topics, and study sites
| Thematic area | Research topic | Study sites (district(s)/ province) |
|---|---|---|
|
| 1. Involvement of community health workers to improve immunisation coverage in hard-to-reach areas of Sukkhur district | Sukkur/ Sindh |
| 2. Addressing community barriers to immunisation in Rajanpur district | Rajanpur/Punjab | |
| 3. Addressing EPI vaccination demand through mHealth in Quetta City, Balochistan: A feasibility study | Quetta/Balochistan | |
| 4. Social mobilisation campaign to tackle immunisation hesitancy in Sargodha and Khushab districts in Pakistan | Sarghoda and Khushab/Punjab | |
|
| 5. Visibility and Analytics Network (VAN) approach to improve immunisation supply chain and management performance system in Pakistan | Ghotki and Sukkur/Sindh |
| 6. E-Vaccs: Qualitative assessment of the barriers and enablers in implementation using Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research | Lahore, DG Khan, Gujrat, Rawalpindi/Punjab | |
|
| 7. Exploring opportunities for strengthening supportive supervision: A case study of EPI services in Sindh | Hyderabad and Thatta/Sindh |
| 8. Understanding accountability for human resources in EPI, Balochistan: Perspective from the government officials at the provincial and district levels | Pishin, Harnai, Jhal Magsi, Killa Abdullah, Killa Saifullah/Balochistan | |
|
| 9. Examining the mechanisms and effectiveness of multi-tiered, EPI-polio synergy | Four provinces (Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab, and Sindh) |
| 10. Developing three-dimensional narrative to counter polio vaccine refusal in Charsadda | Charsadda/ Khyber Pakhtunkhwa |
Data collection methods and participants in survey and interviews*
| Data collection methods | Survey and interview participants |
|---|---|
| Online survey | Researchers (n = 10) |
| EPI implementers(n = 3) | |
| In-depth interviews (face-to-face) | Researchers (n = 5) |
| EPI implementers (n = 2) | |
| UNICEF staff (n = 2) | |
| UNICEF recruited local consultant researcher (n = 1) | |
| Representative of AHPSR (n = 1) | |
| EPI director (n = 1) |
EPI – Expanded Programme on Immunisation
*EPI implementers included policy makers, managers and frontline health workers.