Assessing the state of health research in the Eastern Mediterranean Region
Autor: | Andrea McDonald, Sharif Ismail, Salman Rawaf, Azeem Majeed, Elizabeth Dubois, F G Aljohani, Adam Coutts |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
education.field_of_study
Health Services Needs and Demand Poverty business.industry Mediterranean Region Corporate governance Research Population Environmental resource management Politics Reviews General Medicine Development economics Medicine Financial Support Humans Stewardship business education Human resources Productivity Disease burden |
ISSN: | 0141-0768 |
Popis: | Summary Member states across the Eastern Mediterranean region face unprecedented health challenges, buffeted by demographic change, a dual disease burden, rising health costs, and the effects of ongoing conflict and population movements – exacerbated in the near-term by instability arising from recent political upheaval in the Middle East. However, health actors in the region are not well positioned to respond to these challenges because of a dearth of good quality health research. This review presents an assessment of the current state of health research systems across the Eastern Mediterranean based on publicly available literature and data sources. The review finds that – while there have been important improvements in productivity in the Region since the early 1990s – overall research performance is poor with critical deficits in system stewardship, research training and human resource development, and basic data surveillance. Translation of research into policy and practice is hampered by weak institutional and financial incentives, and concerns over the political sensitivity of findings. These problems are attributable primarily to chronic under-investment – both financial and political – in Research and Development systems. This review identifies key areas for a regional strategy and how to address challenges, including increased funding, research capacity-building, reform of governance arrangements and sustained political investment in research support. A central finding is that the poverty of publicly available data on research systems makes meaningful cross-comparisons of performance within the EMR difficult. We therefore conclude by calling for work to improve understanding of health research systems across the region as a matter of urgency. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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