Monday, September 12, 2011

[EQ] Building the Field of Health Policy and Systems Research: An Agenda for Action

Building the Field of Health Policy and Systems Research: An Agenda for Action

Bennett S, Agyepong IA, Sheikh K, Hanson K, Ssengooba F, et al.
PLoS Med -  August 2011 - 8(8): e1001081. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001081

Website: http://bit.ly/osxupA

Following the First Global Symposium on Health Systems Research in November 2010, the journal PLoS Medicine commissioned three articles on the state of the art in health policy and systems research. Published in August 2011 and authored by a diverse group of global health researchers, the articles examine current challenges and local policy development strengthening in low- and middle-income countries.


Summary Points

There is an urgent need to build the Health Policy and Systems Research (HPSR) field and in particular to develop understanding across different disciplinary boundaries.

The development of HPSR is impeded by a cluster of related issues, namely
(i) a heavy reliance on international funding for HPSR,
(ii) an excessive focus on the direct utility of HPSR findings from specific studies, and
(iii) a tendency to under-value contributions to HPSR from social sciences.

Innovations in funding HPSR are needed so that local actors, including policy-makers, civil society, and researchers, have a greater say in determining the nature of HPSR conducted.

Strategic investment should be made in promoting a greater shared understanding of theoretical frames and methodological approaches for HPSR including, for example, the development of HPSR journals, methodological workshops, and shared HPSR teaching curricula.

Dedicated and supportive homes for HPSR need to be found within universities, and also be developed as independent research institutes.

Related PLoS Articles

Building the Field of Health Policy and Systems Research: Social Science Matters

Building the Field of Health Policy and Systems Research: Framing the Questions

 

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[EQ] International perspectives on the public health implications of 9/11

International perspectives on the public health implications of 9/11

 

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health – August 2011 vol. 35 no. 4, 2011

Public Health Association of Australia

Website: http://bit.ly/o4Mjc4

 

….On behalf of the ANZPH, Guest Editor, Professor Gavin Mooney, invited a number of authors to write about the public health implications of 9/11 ten years on..

10 years on from 9/11

Gavin Mooney
“…….Methodologically in public health we have had to learn from 9/11, for example that public health has to “encompass a broader array of determinants of health

than [it] has previously addressed”.5 Disaster management has grasped that “innovative early post-disaster interventions that may be easily accessed by the general population may be particularly important after future disasters”……


Health and foreign policy: the threat from health securitisation

Célia Almeida

Response from ‘the West’

K.M. Venkat Narayan and Elizabeth Russell

The importance of politics in policy

Vicente Navarro

A view from beside the elephant

David Coburn

A missed wake-up call for the US?

Olufunke A. Alaba

9/11 irrelevant for public health

Peter Sainsbury

Muslim minorities in the West: spatially distant trauma

Samina Yasmeen

Being ‘anti-state’ in public health in India

Sruthi Herbert and Arun Madhavan

Public health and where its focus should be

Gustav Tinghög and Almina Kalkan

Bio-security after 9/11: public health or a threat to public health?

Uffe Juul Jensen

9/11 and all that

Stephen Leeder

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This message from the Pan American Health Organization, PAHO/WHO, is part of an effort to disseminate
information Related to: Equity; Health inequality; Socioeconomic inequality in health; Socioeconomic
health differentials; Gender; Violence; Poverty; Health Economics; Health Legislation; Ethnicity; Ethics;
Information Technology - Virtual libraries; Research & Science issues.  [DD/ KMC Area]
Washington DC USA

“Materials provided in this electronic list are provided "as is". Unless expressly stated otherwise, the findings
and interpretations included in the Materials are those of the authors and not necessarily of The Pan American
Health Organization PAHO/WHO or its country members”.
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