Title: NorthSouth research collaboration: perspectives from the Canadian Coalition for Global Health Resear
1North-South research collaboration perspectives
from the Canadian Coalition for Global Health
Research
- Jacques Girard, Universite Laval
- Vic Neufeld, McMaster University
2Presentation Objectives
- To introduce the Canadian Coalition for Global
Health Research (CCGHR) - To provide an update on the work of the CCGHR
Task Group on Partnership Development - To offer some reflections from LMIC colleagues
from a CCGHR workshop linked to the Colloquium
3The Canadian Coalition for Global Health Research
4The Canadian story
- After Bangkok (2000)
- Following the Bangkok conference, it is time for
all those in Canada concerned with equitable
health care and health development .to renew our
commitment to investing resources in
equity-oriented health research. These resources
include not only finance, but also--and perhaps
more importantly, our collective energy and
talent. - CMAJ 20011641158-9
5The Canadian story (cont.)
- The emergence of two linked entities
- the Global Health Research Initiative (GHRI)
- the Canadian Coalition for Global Health
Research (CCGHR) - Note Our working definition of global health
research (GHR) research on the health problems
of societies in low and middle income countries
(LMICs)
6The Canadian story (cont.)
- Federal agencies participating in GHRI
- International Development Research Centre
(IDRC) - Canadian Institutes for Health Research
(CIHR) - Health Canada (HC)
- Canadian International Development Agency
(CIDA) - Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) signed in
October 2001
7The Canadian story (cont.)
- Goals of GHRI
- 1. Shaping and responding to the GHR agenda
(including funding) - 2. Influencing policy and policy coherence
- 3. Facilitating information sharing and
coordination of effort resources among partner
agencies
8The Canadian story (cont.)
- Canadian Coalition for Global Health Research
(CCGHR) - became a not-for-profit organization (2003)
- elected a board of directors (including 3
appointed members from LMICs) - established a secretariat
- recruited 400 members
- created 6 Task Groups
9The Canadian story (cont.)
- Mission of the CCGHR
- To promote better and more equitable health
worldwide by - mobilizing greater investment in GHR
- nurturing productive partnerships among
Canadians and people from LMICs - translating research into action
-
10The Canadian story (cont.)
- CCGHR Task Groups
- Mobilizing Support
- Research to Action (Knowledge Translation)
- Building South-Canada Partnerships
(LMIC-Canada) - Strengthening National Health Research
Systems - Capacity Building
- Global Health Policy Systems Research
11Achievements
- 1. Increased investment in global health
research - 2. Increased knowledge production and use
through South-Canada partnerships - 3. Stronger advocacy and increasing awareness
- 4. Enhanced capacity development
- 5. Improved coordination and communication
12Achievements (1) - investment
- Increase in funding by GHRI partners
- - from lt CAD 1 million (2001-02) to 8 million
(2003-04) in jointly funded projects - Increase health research funding at IDRC from
3 million (1999-2000) to 12 million (2004-5) - Other one off funds transferred e.g. 50
million for HIV/AIDS vaccine development research
(IAVI) from Canada fund for Africa - CIDA multi-lateral contributions to TDR, HRP
and other research initiatives
13Achievements (1) - investment (continued)
- In relation to the 1990 Commission
recommendation that high income countries should
contribute 5 of health ODA to health research - From GFHR Resource Flows study (with data taken
from OECD database) - In 2001, Canadas contribution was 3.9 of
health ODA - Note Canadas ODA is about 0.3 of GNP
14Achievements (2)- Knowledge Production Use
- 71 South-Canada partnership projects
supported (development pilot project stages) - In addition, 6 multi-year N-S collaborative
research projects funded as part of
CIDA-supported Canadian International
Immunization Initiative Total 5 million - Next round (later in 2005) will involve larger
3-year partnership proposals
15Achievements (2)- Knowledge Production Use
(cont.)
- Partnership building workshop (Toronto, 2003)
involving 71 researchers - Canadians and their research partners from
Australia, China, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, India,
Jordan, Mali, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, South
Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zimbabwe. - Focus strategies for effective South-North
health research partnerships
16Task Group (TG) on LMIC-Canada Partnership
Building An update
- TG work plan
- Analytic framework for GHR
- Progress on results
17TG work plan list of the TG nucleus group
- From LMIC (7) Bangladesh (BRAC/SPH), The
Philippines (IHPDS/UP Manila), Bénin (FSS/UNB),
Jordan (UJ), Guatemala (UG), Mexico (INSP) - From Canadian Universities (8) Calgary,
Dalhousie (NS), Laval, McGill, Toronto, SMU
(Vancouver) - CPHA CSIH (2)
18TG work plan calendar since october 2004
- CCGHR proposal submitted (October 2004) and
funded (december 2004) by IDRC for supporting the
TG - Recruitment of research assistants
(february-April 2005) - Canadian nucleus group meeting in Quebec city
(2-3 April 2005) - International nucleus group meeting in Ottawa
(3-4 June 2005)
19TG work plan outcomes expected in 2005
- A revised working paper with an updated
bibliography - A  funding road map document
- An exploratory dialogue and workshop with
organizations to foresee joint initiatives - An expert group team as an on-going resource to
LMIC-Canada research groups - A web-based resource on effective LMIC-Canada
research partnerships
20TG work plan the client perspective
- Researchers as clients tools need to be
developed within the context of a  broker type
of arrangement - Advocacy on funding agencies we should move
ahead for influencing the agenda - Enlarged focus add to the TG a real
representation from LMIC and put the NGO
perspectives on the front line
21TG work plan basic orientations in global issues
- Link GHR to Health Policy with  change as a
target (ex INDEPTH, TEHIP, etc) potential for
 Observatoires - Cross-cutting factors and issues to consider
within research rights, equity and social
determinants - Focus more on participatory research in order to
involve key actors
22TG work plan some tasks ahead in our lens
- Consensus for a needs assessment survey, a  Tool
Manual and a  Funding Road Map - Quality of partnerships as a major GHR component
- Output oriented process
- Long term involvement of NGOs as key actors for
our  niche - Champions from LMIC as opportunities to tackle
23TG work plan research project features to foresee
- Capacity component as a contract
- Focus on sustainability in front of
evidence-based trends as major landmarks - Objective criteria to forecast a potential and
effective partnership in GHR
24TG work plan A needs assessment survey
- Start with the funded researchers through GHRI on
both sides (Canada-LMIC) - Questionnaires to reflect
- Elements of partnership quality
- Lessons learnt and overcome strategies through
 stories to tell - Needs for Web-based resources
- Confidentiality as a requisite
25Analytic framework for GHR A proposal
Ethical position
- APPROACH ON RIGHTS
- Integral observation (between sectors and
disciplines) and prioritization for action - Link between research and action agenda
- Evaluation standards
- Advocacy
- EQUITY SOCIAL JUSTICE
- SUSTAINABLE SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
- Building opportunities (poverty eradication)
- Capacity improvement (exclusion/vulnerable
groups)) - Intergeneration transfer (vicious circle for
inequalities inequities
26Analytic framework for GHR how to define the
partnership
- A set of explicit strategies and relationships
between key actors and organizations/institutions - Shared responsability as a basic principle for
ackowledging diversity and inequality of the
conditions on site - Systemic perspective for enforcing health
governance and research - Synergistic initiatives for autonomy,
relationship promotion on equal basis and
capacity improvement for implementing research
with a focus on health system and social
determinants.
27Analytic framework for GHR the capacity building
issue
- SYSTEMIC APPROACH distinctive components linked
to each other on a hierarchic scale - Structure, system roles
- Human and material resources
- Technical capacity and professional training
- Tool box (methods technics)
28Analytic framework for GHR A tentative
partnership scale
Adapted from Mario Rovere, 1999
29Analytic framework for GHR A capacity monitoring
view
- Result based capacity Building partnership on
obvious results as assets could mean to question
actions to be undertaken in the future and
endeavors to sustain the process. - Operational capacity Building patnership implies
that practices and appropriate processes to
nourish them are implemented in order to
generate some results in the short, medium and
long range - Strategic capacity Building partnerships through
mechanisms and committment on result based
management needs to be supported by a strategic
scope
30Progress on results
- ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTS
- COMPUTER INTERACTION TOOLS
- WEB INTERACTIVE CONNECTIONS
- TEMPLATES FOR SCIENTIFICS ARTICLES
- SURVEY PROCESS
- QUESTIONNAIRES FOR NEEDS ASSESSMENT
- BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX
- PARTNERSHIP LITTERATURE
31Reflections from LMIC colleagues
- Overview of concerns linked to the Colloquium
32LMIC colleagues viewpoint what they need to cope
with?
- Lack of funds for conducting research with poor
government committment - Lack of dissemination of some key research
findings - Lack of a  research culture in LMIC
- Social development issues a never ending battle
between politics and scientific evidence
33LMIC colleagues viewpoint what they are telling
us?
- Move from alliances to real partnerships more
than a time span difference? - Make interests more explicit, since research is
not value free, for a better understanding - Address the  budget shrinking syndrome from
the onset for more trust - Rely on LMIC expertise for transformation
processes from evidence to policy and action
through informal network channels
34LMIC colleagues viewpoint Where they would like
to be?
- Within the research agenda in order to reduce
 western type development in favor of a more
south to south model - Within the research process throughout its
different steps since they are offering more than
just a field or even a site - Within the evaluation strategies, because their
perceptions for leading social change could
represent the added value we are looking for
35LMIC colleagues viewpoint How they wish to be
involved
- A committment to complement the expertise
provided by OECD countries depending on the
capacity level on site - A participation to joint goals dealing with
capacity building and  benchmarcks indicators - A recognition for their natural allies, namely
NGO and CBO - A work endeavor with more mentorship guidance and
less brain drain
36LMIC colleagues viewpoint Are there issues to
share?
- View research as a transformation process beyond
knowledge transfer - Avoid  accidental partnerships in order to
build sustainable ones - Use leverage for funding as basic tools on both
sides - Develop management skills, especially for
research organizations with low critical mass - Invest in instruments for helping to
 diagnose  research capacity level
37LMIC colleagues viewpoint Could we do better?
- By decentralizing research initiatives out of the
capital city for more flexibility and
sustainability ? - By going beyond traditional academic patterns for
influence strategies ? - By a finetuning for Knowledge Transfer to
different settings ? - By avoiding ethical gaps when choosing the
partners to work with the ones likely to benefit
the most or the strongest ones ?
38LMIC colleagues viewpoint Are there some basic
clues ?
- Rely on a suitable mapping exercise according to
specific situations before getting into a
research initiative - Emphasize the interdisciplinary and the team
approach within partnerships - Consider a set of core values when dealing with
global issues - Make  empowerment a must in terms of basic
orientations
39LMIC colleagues viewpoint What about conflict
zones?
- Need to work with the  oppressor as well as
with the  oppressed - Research as a bridge for peace on a neutral
ground - University-NGO ties even more important as a
challenge - Tangible actions and connections in the context
of a  surge capacity
40Global Health Research Challenge
- How we could learn together!
- Merci
- Gracias
- Thank you