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A new methodology for assessing health policy and systems research and analysis capacity in African universities
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 2740893
Author(s) Le, Gillian; Mirzoev, Tolib; Orgill, Marsha; Erasmus, Ermin; Lehmann, Uta; Okeyo, Stephen; Goudge, Jane; Maluka, Stephen; Uzochukwu, Benjamin; Aikins, Moses; de Savigny, Don; Tomson, Goran; Gilson, Lucy
Author(s) at UniBasel de Savigny, Donald
Year 2014
Title A new methodology for assessing health policy and systems research and analysis capacity in African universities
Journal Health research policy and systems
Volume 12
Pages / Article-Number 59
Abstract

The importance of health policy and systems research and analysis (HPSR + A) has been increasingly recognised, but it is still unclear how most effectively to strengthen the capacity of the different organisations involved in this field. Universities are particularly crucial but the expansive literature on capacity development has little to offer the unique needs of HPSR + A activity within universities, and often overlooks the pivotal contribution of capacity assessments to capacity strengthening.; The Consortium for Health Policy and Systems Analysis in Africa 2011-2015 designed and implemented a new framework for capacity assessment for HPSR + A within universities. The methodology is reported in detail.; Our reflections on developing and conducting the assessment generated four lessons for colleagues in the field. Notably, there are currently no published capacity assessment methodologies for HPSR + A that focus solely on universities - we report a first for the field to initiate the dialogue and exchange of experiences with others. Second, in HPSR + A, the unit of assessment can be a challenge, because HPSR + A groups within universities tend to overlap between academic departments and are embedded in different networks. Third, capacity assessment experience can itself be capacity strengthening, even when taking into account that doing such assessments require capacity.; From our experience, we propose that future systematic assessments of HPSR + A capacity need to focus on both capacity assets and needs and assess capacity at individual, organisational, and systems levels, whilst taking into account the networked nature of HPSR + A activity. A genuine partnership process between evaluators and those participating in an assessment can improve the quality of assessment and uptake of results in capacity strengthening.

Publisher BioMed Central
ISSN/ISBN 1478-4505
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6319241
Full Text on edoc Available
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1186/1478-4505-12-59
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25296935
ISI-Number WOS:000344571200001
Document type (ISI) Article
 
   

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