Jessani Nasreen S, Ling Brenton, Babcock Carly, Valmeekanathan Akshara, Holtgrave David R
Center for Evidence Based Health Care, Department of Global Health, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa.
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States of America.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2022 Mar 18;2(3):e0000034. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000034. eCollection 2022.
Research and teaching are considered core-responsibilities for academic researchers. "Practice" activities however are viewed as ancillary, despite university emphasis on their importance. As funders, governments, and academia address the role of research in social impact, the deliberations on researcher activism, advocacy and lobbying have seen a resurgence. This study explores the perceptions of 52 faculty and 24 government decisionmakers on the roles, responsibilities, and restrictions of an academic to proactively engage in efforts that can be interpreted under these three terms. Data was coded through inductive thematic analysis using Atlas.Ti and a framework approach. We found that discordant perceptions about how much activism, advocacy and lobbying faculty should be engaging in, results from how each term is defined, interpreted, supported and reported by the individuals, the School of Public Health (SPH), and government agencies. Influential faculty factors included: seniority, previous experiences, position within the institution, and being embedded in a research center with an advocacy focus. Faculty views on support for advocacy were often divergent. We surmise therefore, that for effective and mutually beneficial collaboration to occur, academic institutions need to align rhetoric with reality with respect to encouraging modes and support for government engagement. Similarly, government agencies need to provide more flexible modes of engagement. This will contribute to alleviating confusion as well as tension leading to more effective engagement and consequently opportunity for evidence-informed decision making in public health globally.
研究和教学被视为学术研究人员的核心职责。然而,尽管大学强调“实践”活动的重要性,但这些活动仍被视为辅助性的。随着资助者、政府和学术界探讨研究在社会影响中的作用,关于研究人员行动主义、倡导和游说的讨论再度兴起。本研究探讨了52名教员和24名政府决策者对学术人员在这三个术语下积极参与相关工作的角色、责任和限制的看法。数据通过使用Atlas.Ti的归纳主题分析和框架方法进行编码。我们发现,对于教员应参与多少行动主义、倡导和游说活动,存在不一致的看法,这源于个人、公共卫生学院(SPH)和政府机构对每个术语的定义、解释、支持和报告方式。有影响力的教员因素包括:资历、以往经验、在机构内的职位,以及隶属于一个以倡导为重点的研究中心。教员对倡导支持的看法往往存在分歧。因此,我们推测,为了实现有效且互利的合作,学术机构需要在鼓励政府参与的方式和支持方面使言辞与现实保持一致。同样,政府机构需要提供更灵活的参与方式。这将有助于减轻困惑和紧张局势,从而实现更有效的参与,并因此为全球公共卫生领域基于证据的决策创造机会。