Abstract

BackgroundPanama is, economically, the fastest growing country in Central America and is making efforts to improve management mechanisms for research and innovation. However, due to contextual factors, the Panamanian Health Research System is not well developed and is poorly coordinated with the Health System. Likewise, despite recent efforts to define a National Health Research Agenda, implementing this agenda and aligning it with Panamanians’ health needs remains difficult. This articles aims to review Panama’s experience in health research priority setting by analyzing the fairness of previous prioritization processes in order to promote an agreed-upon national agenda aligned with public health needs.MethodsThe three health research prioritization processes performed in Panama between 2006 and 2011 were analyzed based on the guidelines established by the four “Accountability for Reasonableness” principles, namely “relevance”, “publicity”, “revision”, and “enforcement”, which provide a framework for evaluating priority-setting fairness.ResultsThe three health research priority-setting events performed in Panama during the reference period demonstrated a heterogeneous pattern of decision-making strategies, stakeholder group composition, and prioritization outcomes. None of the three analyzed events featured an open discussion process with the scientific community, health care providers, or civil society in order to reach consensus.ConclusionsThis investigation makes evident the lack of a strategy to encourage open discussion by the multiple stakeholders and interest groups that should be involved during the priority-setting process. The analysis reveals the need for a new priority-setting exercise that validates the National Agenda, promotes its implementation by the National Secretariat for Science, Technology and Innovation in conjunction with the Ministry of Health, and empowers multiple stakeholders; such an exercise would, in turn, favor the implementation of the agenda.

Highlights

  • Panama is, economically, the fastest growing country in Central America and is making efforts to improve management mechanisms for research and innovation

  • If evaluated with the accountability for reasonableness” (AR) principles in mind, the described country experience illustrates the establishment of a comprehensive national agenda with a high level of legitimacy based on deliberative practices for consensus building and transparency. This qualitative study was based on the analysis of agenda setting for health research performed in Panama between 2006 and 2011, after science and technology management mechanisms were established in the country

  • Three PENCYTs have been written since National Secretariat for Science (SENACYT) was established in 1992

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The fastest growing country in Central America and is making efforts to improve management mechanisms for research and innovation. Despite recent efforts to define a National Health Research Agenda, implementing this agenda and aligning it with Panamanians’ health needs remains difficult. This articles aims to review Panama’s experience in health research priority setting by analyzing the fairness of previous prioritization processes in order to promote an agreed-upon national agenda aligned with public health needs. The health research prioritization experience in Panama is recent; a National Health Research Agenda acknowledged and embraced by the Health Ministry (MINSA), the country’s governing health institution, has not been developed. The objective of this study was to examine Panama’s experience in setting a National Health Research Agenda from a process perspective in order to improve this practice and generate agreement and fairness in future prioritization exercises

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call