TY - JOUR
T1 - An internal health systems research portfolio assessment of a low-income country research institution
AU - Koehlmoos, Tracey P.
AU - Walker, Damian G.
AU - Gazi, Rukshana
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by ICDDR,B and its donors which provide unrestricted support to the Centre for its operations and research. Current donors providing unrestricted support to the Centre include: Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID), Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh, Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (EKN), Swedish International Development Coopeation Agency (SIDA). Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), and epartment for International Development (DfID), UK. The authors gratefully acknowledge these donors for their support and commitment to the Centre's research efforts. The authors further wish to acknowledge the impact of the external reviewers of the HSID and PHSD. We wish to thank the ICDDR,B Board of Trustees, Professor Alejandro Cravioto and Dr. Charles P. Larson for the encouragement and latitude to develop an HSR agenda.
Funding Information:
There was great variety in the sources of funds for health systems research although the majority of the research was funded by large international donors. Ten of the projects were funded by international donor agencies including the United States Agency for International Development, (USAID) the United Kingdom's Department for International Development (DFID) and the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). One study was funded by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. One of the projects was funded by the WHO. Two studies were funded by private foundations (the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and World Vision). Finally, one project with a dollar value of less than US$ 50,000 was funded by the Centre's own core research funds, which are used to support projects in areas of interest that might generate future research opportunities or present a previously unexplored area. This particular project was looking at health service utilization, health seeking and high risk behavior and needs of the rapidly expanding homeless population in a large urban area.
PY - 2010/4/6
Y1 - 2010/4/6
N2 - Background: In order to determine the type and amount of health systems research being conducted within ICDDR,B (also known as the Centre), a leading research institution in Bangladesh, an internal review of all on-going research protocols was conducted in September 2007.Methods: A review of all ongoing research protocols within the Centre was conducted. The names of the investigators and the institutional divisions of the protocols were removed in order to decrease the amount of reviewer bias. The building blocks of the World Health Organization's "Framework for Action" on health systems was used to categorize the protocols considered to be health systems research projects. Several additional items were collected, e.g. the highest level of education completed by the Principal Investigator. A total dollar value was placed on the health systems research portfolio of the institution based on the budgets of the selected protocols.Results: As of September 2007 16 out of 118 (13.5%) reviewed protocols were considered to be health systems research projects. Results of the six building blocks of the health system categorization demonstrated that a majority of these protocols involved elements of health services delivery. There was very little engagement in more downstream systems and policy research that involved leadership and governance of the health system. Eleven of the HSR studies were local in scope, while there was only one study that has a multinational focus. The Centre's total dollar value for the health systems research project portfolio added up to US $ 3,723,331.Conclusions: This internal review can serve as a snap shot of on-going activities, and as a baseline for future assessments against which to monitor progress in the area of health systems research. Further, it can serve as a model for other institutions striving to assess and develop health systems research programmes and capacity.
AB - Background: In order to determine the type and amount of health systems research being conducted within ICDDR,B (also known as the Centre), a leading research institution in Bangladesh, an internal review of all on-going research protocols was conducted in September 2007.Methods: A review of all ongoing research protocols within the Centre was conducted. The names of the investigators and the institutional divisions of the protocols were removed in order to decrease the amount of reviewer bias. The building blocks of the World Health Organization's "Framework for Action" on health systems was used to categorize the protocols considered to be health systems research projects. Several additional items were collected, e.g. the highest level of education completed by the Principal Investigator. A total dollar value was placed on the health systems research portfolio of the institution based on the budgets of the selected protocols.Results: As of September 2007 16 out of 118 (13.5%) reviewed protocols were considered to be health systems research projects. Results of the six building blocks of the health system categorization demonstrated that a majority of these protocols involved elements of health services delivery. There was very little engagement in more downstream systems and policy research that involved leadership and governance of the health system. Eleven of the HSR studies were local in scope, while there was only one study that has a multinational focus. The Centre's total dollar value for the health systems research project portfolio added up to US $ 3,723,331.Conclusions: This internal review can serve as a snap shot of on-going activities, and as a baseline for future assessments against which to monitor progress in the area of health systems research. Further, it can serve as a model for other institutions striving to assess and develop health systems research programmes and capacity.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77952618122&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/1478-4505-8-8
DO - 10.1186/1478-4505-8-8
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77952618122
SN - 1478-4505
VL - 8
JO - Health Research Policy and Systems
JF - Health Research Policy and Systems
M1 - 8
ER -