Mencía-Ripley Aída, Paulino-Ramírez Robert, Jiménez Juan Ariel, Camilo Odile
Research Department, Universidad Iberoamericana, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.
Research Department, Institute for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Universidad Iberoamericana, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.
Front Res Metr Anal. 2021 Mar 11;6:637187. doi: 10.3389/frma.2021.637187. eCollection 2021.
The COVID-19 pandemic forced healthcare systems globally to handle a dramatic surge in healthcare utilization while also taxing available testing resources. In the context of healthcare systems in Latin America and the Caribbean, COVID-19 added to the existing burden of infectious diseases related to endemic infections such as arboviruses and HIV. In the Dominican Republic, testing is supplied mostly by the private sector and a national public laboratory. The surge in testing demands laid bare a lack of installed capacities both in laboratory facilities and equipment and trained staff in molecular biology laboratory procedures. This article discusses a case of how science diplomacy and a relatively new law fostering public-private partnerships allowed a university to play a major role in public health response while generating knowledge to inform public policy decisions in an unprecedented manner in the country. Science diplomacy is discussed in the context of decolonization and the importance of the local gaze when creating academic partnerships in the context of global health emergencies.
新冠疫情迫使全球医疗系统应对医疗服务利用率的急剧飙升,同时也使现有的检测资源不堪重负。在拉丁美洲和加勒比地区的医疗系统背景下,新冠疫情加剧了与虫媒病毒和艾滋病毒等地方性感染相关的现有传染病负担。在多米尼加共和国,检测主要由私营部门和一家国家公共实验室提供。检测需求的激增暴露了实验室设施和设备以及分子生物学实验室程序方面受过培训的工作人员的能力不足。本文讨论了一个案例,即科学外交以及一项促进公私伙伴关系的相对较新的法律如何使一所大学在公共卫生应对中发挥重要作用,同时以前所未有的方式生成知识,为该国的公共政策决策提供参考。本文在非殖民化的背景下讨论了科学外交,以及在全球卫生紧急情况下建立学术伙伴关系时地方视角的重要性。