Turner Mallory Wolfe, Bogdewic Stephanie, Agha Erum, Blanchard Carrie, Sturke Rachel, Pettifor Audrey, Salisbury Kathryn, Marques Andrea Horvath, Excellent Marie Lina, Rajagopal Nitya, Ramaswamy Rohit
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Fogarty International Center, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Implement Sci Commun. 2021 Dec 4;2(1):134. doi: 10.1186/s43058-021-00238-2.
Despite significant progress in the field of implementation science (IS), current training programs are inadequate to meet the global need, especially in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs). Even when training opportunities exist, there is a "knowledge-practice gap," where implementation research findings are not useful to practitioners in a field designed to bridge that gap. This is a critical challenge in LMICs where complex public health issues must be addressed. This paper describes results from a formal assessment of learning needs, priority topics, and delivery methods for LMIC stakeholders.
We first reviewed a sample of articles published recently in Implementation Science to identify IS stakeholders and assigned labels and definitions for groups with similar roles. We then employed a multi-step sampling approach and a random sampling strategy to recruit participants (n = 39) for a semi-structured interview that lasted 30-60 min. Stakeholders with inputs critical to developing training curricula were prioritized and selected for interviews. We created memos from audio-recorded interviews and used a deductively created codebook to conduct thematic analysis. We calculated kappa coefficients for each memo and used validation techniques to establish rigor including incorporating feedback from reviewers and member checking.
Participants included program managers, researchers, and physicians working in over 20 countries, primarily LMICs. The majority had over 10 years of implementation experience but fewer than 5 years of IS experience. Three main themes emerged from the data, pertaining to past experience with IS, future IS training needs, and contextual issues. Most respondents (even with formal training) described their IS knowledge as basic or minimal. Preferences for future training were heterogeneous, but findings suggest that curricula must encompass a broader set of competencies than just IS, include mentorship/apprenticeship, and center the LMIC context.
While this work is the first systematic assessment of IS learning needs among LMIC stakeholders, findings reflect existing research in that current training opportunities may not meet the demand, trainings are too narrowly focused to meet the heterogeneous needs of stakeholders, and there is a need for a broader set of competencies that moves beyond only IS. Our research also demonstrates the timely and unique needs of developing appropriately scoped, accessible training and mentorship support within LMIC settings. Therefore, we propose the novel approach of intelligent swarming as a solution to help build IS capacity in LMICs through the lens of sustainability and equity.
尽管实施科学(IS)领域取得了重大进展,但当前的培训项目仍不足以满足全球需求,尤其是在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)。即使存在培训机会,也存在“知识-实践差距”,即在一个旨在弥合这一差距的领域中,实施研究结果对从业者并无用处。在必须解决复杂公共卫生问题的低收入和中等收入国家,这是一个严峻的挑战。本文描述了对低收入和中等收入国家利益相关者的学习需求、优先主题和交付方法进行正式评估的结果。
我们首先回顾了最近在《实施科学》上发表的一组文章样本,以确定实施科学的利益相关者,并为具有相似角色的群体指定标签和定义。然后,我们采用多步骤抽样方法和随机抽样策略,招募参与者(n = 39)进行为期30 - 60分钟的半结构化访谈。对制定培训课程至关重要的利益相关者被优先考虑并入选访谈。我们根据访谈录音创建备忘录,并使用一个演绎创建的编码本进行主题分析。我们计算了每个备忘录的kappa系数,并使用验证技术来确保严谨性,包括纳入审稿人的反馈和成员核对。
参与者包括在20多个国家工作的项目经理、研究人员和医生,主要是在低收入和中等收入国家。大多数人有超过10年的实施经验,但实施科学经验少于5年。数据中出现了三个主要主题,与实施科学的过去经验、未来实施科学培训需求以及背景问题有关。大多数受访者(即使接受过正规培训)将他们的实施科学知识描述为基础或极少。对未来培训的偏好各不相同,但研究结果表明,课程必须涵盖比实施科学更广泛的一系列能力,包括指导/学徒制,并以低收入和中等收入国家的背景为中心。
虽然这项工作是对低收入和中等收入国家利益相关者的实施科学学习需求的首次系统评估,但研究结果反映了现有研究的情况,即当前的培训机会可能无法满足需求,培训过于狭隘,无法满足利益相关者的多样化需求,并且需要一套超越实施科学的更广泛的能力。我们的研究还表明了在低收入和中等收入国家背景下开发适当规模、可及的培训和指导支持的及时且独特的需求。因此,我们提出了智能集群的新方法,作为一种通过可持续性和公平性视角帮助在低收入和中等收入国家建设实施科学能力的解决方案。