Abstract

West Africa has adopted numerous strategies to counter maternal and infant mortality, provides national maternal and infant health programmes, and hosts many active technical and financial partners and non-governmental organisations. Despite this, maternal and infant morbidity and mortality indicators are still very high. In this commentary, internal actors and officials of the West African Health Organisation (WAHO) examine the regional organisation’s role in promoting research as a tool for strengthening maternal and infant health in West Africa.As a specialised institution of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) responsible for health issues, WAHO’s mission is to provide the sub-region’s population with the highest possible health standards by harmonising Member States’ policies, resource pooling, and cooperation among Member States and third countries to collectively and strategically combat the region’s health problems. To achieve this, WAHO’s main intervention strategy is that of facilitation, as this encourages the generation and use of evidence to inform decision-making and reinforce practice.WAHO’s analysis of interventions since 2000 showed that it had effected some changes in research governance, management and funding, as well as in individual and institutional capacity building, research dissemination, collaboration and exchanges between the various stakeholders. It also revealed several challenges such as process ownership, member countries’ commitment, weak individual and institutional capacity, mobilisation, and stakeholder commitment. To better strengthen evidence-based decision-making, in 2016, WAHO created a unique programme aimed at improving the production, dissemination and use of research information and results in health programme planning to ultimately improve population health.While WAHO’s experiences to date demonstrate how a regional health institution can integrate research promotion into the fight against maternal and infant mortality, the challenges the organisation has encountered also demonstrate the importance of cohesion among actors promoting such an initiative, the importance of leadership and commitment among member country actors steering the process, and the need for collaboration and coordination among all partners in member countries and in the region.

Highlights

  • In this commentary, we, the internal actors and officials of the West African Health Organisation (WAHO), examine our regional institution’s role in promoting research as a tool for strengthening maternal and infant health in West Africa

  • West Africa has a number of strategies to counter maternal and infant mortality, provides national maternal and infant health programmes, and hosts many active technical and financial partners and non-governmental organisations

  • In 2015, a review sponsored by WAHO showed that West African barriers to improvements in those indicators were linked to context and health systems factors [2]

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Summary

Background

The Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research. The West African Health Organization's experience in improving the health research environment in the ECOWAS region. Evaluation of regional project to strengthen national health research systems in four countries in West Africa: lessons learned. Moving Maternal Newborn and Child Health Evidence into Policy in West Africa. The West Africa Initiative to Strengthen Capacities through Health Systems Research. West and Central African Health Policy, Systems and Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent health partnership. South-South capacity building and networking partnership for leadership, research and practice to support health policy, systems strengthening for improved Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health (MNCAH) outcomes improvement in West and Central Africa. Strengthening Health Policy and Systems Research Capacity in West Africa: Lessons and Experiences from a Collaborative Sub-regional Effort.

Conclusion
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