Abstract

BackgroundThoughtful and equitable engagement with international partners is key to successful research. STRIPE, a consortium of 8 academic and research institutions across the globe whose objective is to map, synthesize, and disseminate lessons learned from polio eradication, conducted a process evaluation of this partnership during the project’s first year which focused on knowledge mapping activities.MethodsThe STRIPE consortium is led by Johns Hopkins University (JHU) in partnership with 6 universities and 1 research consultancy organization in polio free, at-risk, and endemic countries. In December 2018 JHU team members submitted written reflections on their experiences (n = 9). We held calls with each consortium member to solicit additional feedback (n = 7). To establish the partnership evaluation criteria we conducted preliminary analyses based on Blackstock’s framework evaluating participatory research. In April 2019, an in-person consortium meeting was held; one member from each institution was asked to join a process evaluation working group. This group reviewed the preliminary criteria, adding, subtracting, and combining as needed; the final evaluation criteria were applied to STRIPE’s research process and partnership and illustrative examples were provided.ResultsTwelve evaluation criteria were defined and applied by each member of the consortium to their experience in the project. These included access to resources, expectation setting, organizational context, external context, quality of information, relationship building, transparency, motivation, scheduling, adaptation, communication and engagement, and capacity building. For each criteria members of the working group reflected on general and context-specific challenges and potential strategies to overcome them. Teams suggested providing more time for recruitment, training, reflection, pre-testing. and financing to alleviate resource constraints. Given the large scope of the project, competing priorities, and shifting demands the working group also suggested a minimum of one full-time project coordinator in each setting to manage resources.ConclusionSuccessful management of multi-country, multicentered implementation research requires comprehensive communication tools (which to our knowledge do not exist yet or are not readily available), expectation setting, and institutional support. Capacity building activities that address human resource needs for both individuals and their institutions should be incorporated into early project planning.

Highlights

  • Thoughtful and equitable engagement with international partners is key to successful research

  • Fourteen evaluation criteria emerged from the team’s written reflections, 10 of which are described by Blackstock et al No new criteria were established during the calls with consortium member teams

  • Two evaluation criteria were added during the consortium-wide meeting including capacity building, and social capital and power, the former of which is included in Blackstock’s framework

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Summary

Introduction

Thoughtful and equitable engagement with international partners is key to successful research. The CIOMS guidelines echo the themes discussed by implementers and researchers Through their participatory evaluation of collaboration across research centers Scarinci et al found commitment from all stakeholders, participation, and meaningful engagement are necessary to successfully evaluate partnerships [5]. These partnership guidelines and metrics are necessary in global health given the historical challenges faced by global partnerships including unpredictable financing, low levels of trust, and lack of capacity building [6,7,8]

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