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Building operational research capacity in low- and middle-income countries Anthony D Harries, The Union, Paris, France London School Hygiene & Tropical.

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Presentation on theme: "Building operational research capacity in low- and middle-income countries Anthony D Harries, The Union, Paris, France London School Hygiene & Tropical."— Presentation transcript:

1 Building operational research capacity in low- and middle-income countries Anthony D Harries, The Union, Paris, France London School Hygiene & Tropical medicine

2 Previous OR training models Class of 15 – 20 people One – two week course on methods / data Participants return to countries / stations But…very few publish Why?? – no writing skills, no time, no mentorship

3 International TB Course: 2001 - 2007 28 participants developed ORP 11 started OR when home 7 collected and analysed data 1 wrote a paper 0 published a paper Ohkado et al, IJTLD 2010, 14: 371-3

4 S RT IT Course Purpose: To teach the practical skills for conducting and publishing operational research Approach: “combines training with implementation” Product –oriented [a submitted research paper] Modular approach [3 modules over 10-12 months] Milestones must be achieved to stay in course Targets must be achieved to keep the brand

5 Research questions focus on routine data collected within public health systems or by NGOs “Our country is data rich but information poor” Minister of Health, Fiji

6 Target Audience Applicants should be implementers (doctors, nurses, paramedical officers, data analysts, M&E officers) No more than 12 participants in total per course. All three modules to be completed and these are funded through Union-MSF

7 To be a successful applicant: Defined criteria:- –Engaged in programme work and will return to this work –Supervisors endorsement -time and opportunity for research –Competent in English and computer literate –Have done MPH or equivalent or come strongly recommended –There is a stated and acceptable mentor at country level –Funding for the research can be acquired through other sources Application:- –Submit curriculum vitae plus two references –Complete application form with1/2 page written on programme problem and research question

8 Applications to recent Courses: July 2014 Paris Course: 159 March 2015 Asian Course:84 March 2015 African Course: 111

9 Module 1: [6 days] Research Protocol Module 2: [6 days] Data and analysis Module 3: [7 days] The Paper milestone 1 milestone 2 milestone 3 milestone 4 THE COURSE :

10 Milestones for the course Milestone 1: Submission of protocol and Union EAG form within three weeks of completing Module 1 Milestone 2: Submission of EpiData documentation sheet within two weeks of completing Module 2 Milestone 3: Submission of proof of study completion and data collection about 6 weeks before Module 3 Milestone 4: Submission of paper to peer-reviewed journal within 4 weeks of end of Module 3

11 Lectures and discussion Plenary presentations from participants Hands-on mentorship from Module 1 to Paper-in-Press TEACHING FORMAT

12 Module 1 and 3 12 mentors 12 participants 6 mentor pairings: senior / junior Each pair with two participants Protocol design Published paper Modus operandi: Hands-on in modules Develop versions Support between modules Mentors are co-authors Module 2 6 mentors: each mentor with two participants Mentors: Union – MSF faculty Faculty from outside Institutions credited with outputs MENTORS

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14 Targets to be achieved: 80-80-80-80 IndicatorTarget Aggregate participants score for each module80% Participants complete all course milestones80% Papers published ≤18 months of submission80% Papers assessed for effects on policy and practice ≤18 months of submission 80%

15 Does the Model work?

16 First Paris Course: 2009-2010 Aug 2009: 12 participants from Africa and Asia developed research protocol April 2010: 11 participants submitted 14 papers to international journals Dec 2013: 14 papers accepted for publication Second Course: 2010 - 2011 3 participants from first OR Course facilitated on second OR Course

17 Research Training Courses and participants: Aug 2009 – June 2015 Research CourseNo. of coursesParticipants enrolled Paris Union-MSF559 Luxembourg MSF-Union336 India (PHFI & Chennai)334 South Pacific-Union336 Regional Asian448 Regional African560 East Europe/Central Asia222 Panama - Latin America110 TOTAL26305

18 Global Research Capacity Gaps – Researchers per million inhabitants / Country

19 South America 5 Brazil 2 Peru 2 Mexico 1 El Salvador 1 Colombia 1 Dominican Republic 1 Guatemala 1 Honduras 1 Haiti Africa 16 Kenya 9 South Africa 8 Ethiopia 12 Malawi 10 Zimbabwe 1 Benin 2 Somaliland 4 Rwanda 4 Uganda 1 Ghana 2 Tanzania 3 Namibia 6 Burundi 3 Botswana 1 Madagascar 1 Lesotho 7 Swaziland 3 Democratic Republic of the Congo 3 Sudan 1 Mozambique 3 Nigeria 2 Somalia 4 Sierra Leone 2 Liberia 1 Guinea 1 Ivory Coast Europe 1 Georgia 2 Ukraine 1 Estonia 2 Latvia 3 Belorussia 2 Moldova 2 Armenia 1 Azerbaijan 1 Denmark 1 Italy 1 Switzerland South Pacific 2 New Caledonia 1 Cook Islands 2 Tonga 3 Marshall Islands 1 Federated States of Micronesia 2 Solomon Islands 2 Vanuata 25 Fiji Asia 58 India 8 Bangladesh 6 Pakistan 4 Afghanistan 5 Nepal 7 Bhutan 3 Sri Lanka 4 Uzbekistan 3 Tadjikistan 1 Singapore 5 China 3 Vietnam 1 Mongolia 3 Cambodia 7 Myanmar 2 Kazaksthan 1 Turkmenistan 2 Kyrgysthan 1 Timor Leste 1 Indonesia SORT IT Operational Research Courses TOTAL: 26 courses with 305 participants enrolled from 74 countries

20 Research Projects undertaken in 26 courses Research Project SubjectNumber Tuberculosis / HIV-TB / Diabetes-TB176 HIV/AIDS38 Maternal and Child Health14 Malaria, NTDs and Ebola30 Malnutrition5 Other [smoking, NCD, Cancer]52 TOTAL315

21 Outputs from 20 completed OR courses: by 30 June, 2015 Participants starting the course236 Participants finishing the course with all milestones completed 213 (90%) Scientific papers submitted to peer- reviewed journals 249 Papers published or in press220 (88%)

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23 Preferences for publication: Open Access Journals: PLOS One; PLOS Medicine BMC Public Health; BMC Medicine; BMC Health Services; BMC Infectious Diseases Public Health Action (PHA)

24 Why an emphasis on papers Quality control standard International Guidelines evidence based Critical way to disseminate knowledge Paper writing makes authors “experts” Credibility

25 Ancient Roman Proverb “Scripta manent, verba volant” “Spoken words fly away Written words remain” “If you do not write about it, it did not happen” Virginia Woolf

26 BUT…… Importantly we go beyond Papers to influence policy and practice

27 Use of pharmacy records for determining retention on ART in South Africa and Malawi 100 years of smoking and population-attributable deaths in India Using Telemedicine to reduce childhood deaths in Somalia Screening Tuberculosis patients for diabetes mellitus in India Reducing maternal mortality through emergency obstetric services in Burundi Caring for victims of sexual violence in Liberia and Kenya

28 Outputs from the first 8 courses [80-80-80-80 targets] IndicatorsNoOutputsNo% Modules assessed24Modules scoring ≥ 80%24100% Participants enrolled93Participants completing course8389% Papers submitted96Papers published ≤ 18 months8993% Papers published89Assessed for policy & practice8899%

29 Outputs from the first 8 courses 88 papers assessed for policy and practice 65 (74%) made a difference Change in programme implementation N=27 Adaptation of monitoring tools N=24 Change in existing guidelines N=20 Some papers had more than one effect on policy and practice Data are self-reported through a questionnaire Zachariah et al, TMIH 2014; 19: 1068-1075

30 Costs per published paper [total cost of 8 courses including open access publication = 603,000 Euro] 89 published papers at 6,800 Euro per paper EU-funded papers [PubMed]: cost per paper = 224,769 Euro Source: Galsworthy et al, Academic output of 9 years of EU investment into health research. Lancet 2012; 380: 971-2

31 Operational Research Alumni Network Web-based organization Email follow-up 18 months after course Track research to policy / how alumni are doing Alumni to assist with facilitation / mentoring Alumni to assist with OR paper reviews Alumni to become Professors of OR! Bissell K et al. Operational research training: the course and beyond. Public Health Action 2012; 2: 92-97 Guillerm N et al. What happens after participants complete a SORT IT Course? Public Health Action 2014; 4: 89-95

32 Beyond the course…. Participants returning questionnaire76 Completed research projects after the course47 (62%) Published papers after the course38 (50%) Facilitated at further operational research courses33 (43%) 83 successful participants completed the course: 76 (92%) returned questionnaire

33 Conclusion about Training This is target-orientated training Products = Papers and Influence on policy and practice Long term vision = capacity building and development of leadership in operational research in LIC and MIC


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