Abstract

BackgroundEvidence-based practice in medicine and social policy relies heavily on evidence synthesis. To translate evidence into practical guidelines for low- and middle-income countries, local expertise is essential. The objectives of this study are to assess the change in capacity for conducting evidence synthesis in Africa and to identify key African institutions for regional capacity-building. We take on a network perspective, considering that the position of an institution in the African evidence ecosystem is one constituent of its research capacity.MethodsWe systematically identified 3548 evidence synthesis publications between 2008 and 2019 with at least one author in Africa from the Web of Science Core Collection. These articles involved 3769 institutions. Longitudinal institution-level collaboration network data were constructed based on co-authorship information. We used social network analysis to examine the institutions’ connectivity and tendency for intra- and interregional collaboration. We also identified the degree- and betweenness-central African institutions and explored the structure and composition of their local network neighbourhoods.ResultsThe number of African institutions involved in evidence synthesis has increased substantially over the last decade, from 31 in 2008 to 521 in 2019, and so has the number of evidence synthesis publications with authors in Africa. African institutions in the evidence ecosystem have also become more connected during this period. Although the amount of intercontinental collaboration continues to exceed that of regional collaboration, the tendency for African institutions to collaborate with partners in Africa is increasing. We identified seven institutions—in South Africa, Egypt and Uganda—as central to the collaboration networks between 2008 and 2019, all of whom showed a tendency to collaborate across sectors.ConclusionThe development of more regionally based network-building initiatives would help to foster communities of practice and inter-institutional collaboration, strengthening regional research capacity. Moreover, the analysis in this study adds depth beyond a simple bibliometric analysis and illustrates that network analysis could provide a useful tool to evaluate the effectiveness of capacity-building strategies and programmes in the future.

Highlights

  • Evidence-based practice in medicine and social policy relies heavily on evidence synthesis

  • We evaluated the development of collaboration on evidence synthesis in Africa between 2008 and 2019 based on co-authorship information from published evidence syntheses that include at least one author affiliated with an African institution

  • In this study, we used social network analysis to assess the changes in the network of co-authorship on evidence synthesis publications between 2008 and 2019 to shed light on the capacity of African institutions to conduct evidence syntheses and the distribution of social capital within this network

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence-based practice in medicine and social policy relies heavily on evidence synthesis. A title search for “systematic review” in Web of Science reveals a 70-fold increase in the number of systematic reviews published annually since the year 2000 in a wide range of disciplines [3]. While this proliferation of evidence synthesis has largely been driven by researchers in North America and Europe, there is a need to increase the production of evidence synthesis by researchers and institutions in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) [4]. The production of policy- or practice-relevant evidence synthesis requires engagement with multiple stakeholders both in and outside of academia, including policy-makers, technical experts and the industrial sector. If questions relevant to LMICs are to be effectively addressed by evidence synthesis, collaborations should include researchers and other stakeholders from these regions and across sectors [5]

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