Abstract

BackgroundImplementation Research (IR) in and around health systems comes with unique challenges for researchers including implementation, multi-layer governance, and ethical issues. Partnerships between researchers, implementers, policy makers and community members are central to IR and come with additional challenges. In this paper, we elaborate on the challenges faced by frontline field researchers, drawing from experience with an IR study on Village Health Sanitation and Nutrition Committees (VHSNCs).MethodsThe IR on VHSNC took place in one state/province in India over an 18-month research period. The IR study had twin components; intervention and in-depth research. The intervention sought to strengthen the VHSNC functioning, and concurrently the research arm sought to understand the contextual factors, pathways and mechanism affecting VHSNC functions. Frontline researchers were employed for data collection and a research assistant was living in the study sites. The frontline research assistant experienced a range of challenges, while collecting data from the study sites, which were documented as field memos and analysed using inductive content analysis approach.ResultsDue to the relational nature of IR, the challenges coalesced around two sets of relationships (a) between the community and frontline researchers and (b) between implementers and frontline researchers. In the community, the frontline researcher was viewed as the supervisor of the intervention and was perceived by the community to have power to bring about beneficial changes with public services and facilities. Implementers expected help from the frontline researcher in problem-solving in VHSNCs, and feedback on community mobilization to improve their approaches. A concerted effort was undertaken by the whole research team to clarify and dispel concerns among the community and implementers through careful and constant communication. The strategies employed were both managerial, relational and reflexive in nature.ConclusionFrontline researchers through their experiences shape the research process and its outcome and they play a central role in the research. It demonstrates that frontline researcher resilience is very crucial when conducting health policy and systems research.

Highlights

  • Implementation Research (IR) in and around health systems comes with unique challenges for researchers including implementation, multi-layer governance, and ethical issues

  • Themes that emerged out of the analysis of and reflection on the memos are arranged in two parts: first, challenges and opportunities that arose between the researchers and community members, and second, challenges and opportunities that arose between the researchers and non-governmental organization (NGO) staff

  • Relationship between frontline researchers and community members we describe the perceptions of the community about the identity and influence of the research assistant, and their concerns about the observational activities of the research assistant

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Summary

Introduction

Implementation Research (IR) in and around health systems comes with unique challenges for researchers including implementation, multi-layer governance, and ethical issues. Implementation research (IR) is a growing field of inquiry within the broader terrain of health policy and systems research (HPSR) that seeks to better our understanding of how decisions about health policies, programmes, and practices are made [1]. It does so by examining the process of health policy and program implementation in real-world contexts. IR contends with a range of challenges, including ethical issues [2], determining how best to account for contextual features when evaluating implementation outcomes [3], multi-layer problems of implementation, which are attributed to the fact that several layers of government are often involved in policy processes [4, 5] and drawing policy-relevant conclusions from research using few cases with many variables [5, 6]

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