Health Systems Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa.
Cochrane Nigeria, Institute of Tropical Diseases Research and Prevention, University of Calabar Teaching Hospital, Calabar, Nigeria.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2024 Apr 16;22(1):48. doi: 10.1186/s12961-024-01133-7.
Sub-Saharan Africa is the region with the highest under-five mortality rate globally. Child healthcare decisions should be based on rigorously developed evidence-informed guidelines. The Global Evidence, Local Adaptation (GELA) project is enhancing capacity to use global research to develop locally relevant guidelines for newborn and child health in South Africa (SA), Malawi, and Nigeria. The first step in this process was to identify national priorities for newborn and child health guideline development, and this paper describes our approach.
We followed a good practice method for priority setting, including stakeholder engagement, online priority setting surveys and consensus meetings, conducted separately in South Africa, Malawi and Nigeria. We established national Steering Groups (SG), comprising 10-13 members representing government, academia, and other stakeholders, identified through existing contacts and references, who helped prioritise initial topics identified by research teams and oversaw the process. Various stakeholders were consulted via online surveys to rate the importance of topics, with results informing consensus meetings with SGs where final priority topics were agreed.
Based on survey results, nine, 10 and 11 topics were identified in SA, Malawi, and Nigeria respectively, which informed consensus meetings. Through voting and discussion within meetings, and further engagement after the meetings, the top three priority topics were identified in each country. In SA, the topics concerned anemia prevention in infants and young children and post-discharge support for caregivers of preterm and LBW babies. In Malawi, they focused on enteral nutrition in critically ill children, diagnosis of childhood cancers in the community, and caring for neonates. In Nigeria, the topics focused on identifying pre-eclampsia in the community, hand hygiene compliance to prevent infections, and enteral nutrition for LBW and preterm infants.
Through dynamic and iterative stakeholder engagement, we identified three priority topics for guideline development on newborn and child health in SA, Malawi and Nigeria. Topics were specific to contexts, with no overlap, which highlights the importance of contextualised priority setting as well as of the relationships with key decisionmakers who help define the priorities.
撒哈拉以南非洲是全球五岁以下儿童死亡率最高的地区。儿童保健决策应基于经过严格制定的循证指南。全球证据、地方适应(GELA)项目旨在增强利用全球研究为南非(SA)、马拉维和尼日利亚的新生儿和儿童健康制定本地相关指南的能力。这一过程的第一步是确定新生儿和儿童保健指南制定的国家优先事项,本文介绍了我们的方法。
我们遵循了一种优先事项设定的良好实践方法,包括利益相关者参与、南非、马拉维和尼日利亚分别进行的在线优先事项设定调查和共识会议。我们成立了国家指导小组(SG),由 10-13 名代表政府、学术界和其他利益相关者的成员组成,通过现有联系和参考资料确定,他们帮助优先考虑研究团队确定的最初主题,并监督该过程。通过在线调查咨询了各种利益相关者,对主题的重要性进行了评分,结果为指导小组的共识会议提供了信息,在会上商定了最终的优先主题。
根据调查结果,南非、马拉维和尼日利亚分别确定了 9、10 和 11 个主题,这些主题为共识会议提供了信息。通过会议内部的投票和讨论,以及会议后的进一步接触,每个国家都确定了三个优先主题。在南非,主题涉及婴儿和幼儿贫血预防以及早产儿和低出生体重婴儿照顾者的出院后支持。在马拉维,重点是危重症儿童的肠内营养、社区内儿童癌症的诊断以及新生儿护理。在尼日利亚,重点是社区中识别子痫前期、遵守手卫生以预防感染以及低出生体重和早产儿的肠内营养。
通过动态和迭代的利益相关者参与,我们确定了南非、马拉维和尼日利亚新生儿和儿童保健指南制定的三个优先事项。这些主题针对具体情况,没有重叠,这突出了针对具体情况进行优先事项设定以及与帮助确定优先事项的关键决策者建立关系的重要性。