Abstract

BackgroundSince the Commission on Health Research for Development (COHRED) published its flagship report, more attention has been focused on strengthening national health research systems (NHRS). This paper evaluates the contribution of a regional project that used a participatory approach to strengthen NHRS in four post-conflict West African countries – Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Mali.MethodsThe data from the situation analysis conducted at the start of the project was compared to data from the project’s final evaluation, using a hybrid conceptual framework built around four key areas identified through the analysis of existing frameworks. The four areas are governance and management, capacities, funding, and dissemination/use of research findings.ResultsThe project helped improve the countries’ governance and management mechanisms without strengthening the entire NHRS. In the four countries, at least one policy, plan or research agenda was developed. One country put in place a national health research ethics committee, while all four countries could adopt a research information management system. The participatory approach and support from the West African Health Organisation and COHRED were all determining factors.ConclusionThe lessons learned from this project show that the fragile context of these countries requires long-term engagement and that support from a regional institution is needed to address existing challenges and successfully strengthen the entire NHRS.

Highlights

  • Since the Commission on Health Research for Development (COHRED) published its flagship report, more attention has been focused on strengthening national health research systems (NHRS)

  • The analysis showed that three countries (Guinea-Bissau, Liberia and Sierra Leone) were far behind compared to the others

  • Research governance and management During the situational analysis phase, the four countries that signed the Algiers Declaration on Research for Health [36] and the Libreville Declaration on Health and Environment [37] had health policies or plans that gave high priority to research development, showing a willingness to develop health research [27]. This willingness was more notable in Guinea-Bissau, which had requested support from COHRED in 2008 [28]

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Summary

Introduction

Since the Commission on Health Research for Development (COHRED) published its flagship report, more attention has been focused on strengthening national health research systems (NHRS). The analysis showed that three countries (Guinea-Bissau, Liberia and Sierra Leone) were far behind compared to the others What they had in common was that they were all post-conflict countries with few qualified human resources, a significant number of competing priorities, many stakeholders to help with reconstruction [20,21,22,23,24,25], more interest in offers of aid than in research, an insecure environment, and limited research funding [26,27,28]. Mali was added because, it has many research institutions, it suffered from poor coordination among stakeholders [29]

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