Abstract

Background:Strengthening health research is essential to inform public health policies. However, few research training programs have systematically measured their impact on capacity building and most evaluations have been limited to reporting of individual trainee metrics. Hence, we conducted an evaluation of the impact of a five-year training program focused on building both trainee and institutional research capacity at a public medical college in India.Methods:Quantitative and qualitative methods were used to assess the individual and institutional research capacity building of a five-year HIV-TB research training program at Byramjee Jeejeebhoy Government Medical College in Pune, India, supported by the US National Institutes of Health, Fogarty International Center. In addition to documentation of the number of trainee research projects initiated, the number of research papers produced by the Fogarty Scholars (FSs) available on PubMed was calculated. The institutional impact of this program was assessed by documentation of research training activities conducted by the FSs, as well as by surveys and in-depth interviews conducted at the beginning and end of the program.Results:Twenty-one mid-level BJGMC faculty were provided training in HIV-TB research competencies. Between 1 April 2014 and 1 April 2019, 13 of these FSs designed and implemented new IRB-approved research studies and contributed to 49 PubMed listed research papers, including 11 first-authored manuscripts. FSs also conducted 36 journal club discussions, mentored 58 student research projects and conducted 5 institutional research method workshops. Pre- and-post-program surveys and in-depth interviews documented a perceived increase in institutional research capacity, particularly in TB research (epidemiology, clinical research, laboratory research). The impact of the Fogarty Training Program on institutional scientific output was perceived to be marginally improved.Conclusion:The Fogarty Training Program had a significant impact on building individual research capacity. To sustain this impact beyond the five years of Fogarty support, additional governmental and institutional resources, the establishment of dedicated space for faculty research and protected faculty time for research are needed. These findings can inform the design and implementation of future health research capacity building initiatives.

Highlights

  • Strengthening health research is essential to inform public health policies

  • Individual Trainee Research Capacity During the five years prior to the initiation of the Fogarty program, 21 Byramjee Jeejeebhoy Government Medical College (BJGMC) faculty members contributed to 18 PubMed listed research publications, of which 8 manuscripts were first-authored by Fogarty Scholars

  • There was a significant increase in the number of publications attributed to the Fogarty Scholars before and after the Fogarty training program (p < 0.0001)

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Summary

Introduction

Strengthening health research is essential to inform public health policies. few research training programs have systematically measured their impact on capacity building and most ­evaluations have been limited to reporting of individual trainee metrics. We conducted an ­evaluation of the impact of a five-year training program focused on building both trainee and institutional research capacity at a public medical college in India. To sustain this impact beyond the five years of Fogarty support, additional governmental and institutional resources, the establishment of dedicated space for faculty research and protected faculty time for research are needed These findings can inform the design and implementation of future health research capacity building initiatives. Dhumal et al: Impact of the Fogarty Training Program on Trainee and Institutional Research Capacity Building at a Government Medical College in India and TB in India can expand the ability to study important clinical research questions, such as epidemiological questions focused on risk of development of drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB [1, 4, 5]. Health care professionals are the ones who are directly involved in the HIV-TB management; reinforcing their research capacity in this arena is very essential [6]

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