Author
Listed:
- Michael Käser
- Christine Maure
- Beatrice M M Halpaap
- Mahnaz Vahedi
- Sara Yamaka
- Pascal Launois
- Núria Casamitjana
Abstract
Between August 2012 and April 2013 the Career Development Fellowship programme of the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (World Health Organization) underwent an external evaluation to assess its past performance and determine recommendations for future programme development and continuous performance improvement. The programme provides a year-long training experience for qualified researchers from low and middle income countries at pharmaceutical companies or product development partnerships. Independent evaluators from the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute and the Barcelona Institute for Global Health used a results-based methodology to review the programme. Data were gathered through document review, surveys, and interviews with a range of programme participants. The final evaluation report found the Career Development Fellowship to be relevant to organizers’ and programme objectives, efficient in its operations, and effective in its training scheme, which was found to address needs and gaps for both fellows and their home institutions. Evaluators found that the programme has the potential for impact and sustainability beyond the programme period, especially with the successful reintegration of fellows into their home institutions, through which newly-developed skills can be shared at the institutional level. Recommendations included the development of a scheme to support the re-integration of fellows into their home institutions post-fellowship and to seek partnerships to facilitate the scaling-up of the programme. The impact of the Professional Membership Scheme, an online professional development tool launched through the programme, beyond the scope of the Career Development Fellowship programme itself to other applications, has been identified as a positive unintended outcome. The results of this evaluation may be of interest for other efforts in the field of research capacity strengthening in LMICs or, generally, to other professional development schemes of a similar structure.Author Summary: The asymmetry of research training between high and low and middle income countries (LMICs) and the resulting need for research capacity strengthening (RCS) in under-resourced regions has long been established. In 1999, the World Health Organization (WHO), through the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR), launched the Career Development Fellowship (CDF) programme, in which LMICs’ candidates spend one year in a pharmaceutical company to be trained in product development and clinical research and then return to their home institution. Between August 2012 and April 2013, the programme underwent an independent external evaluation from the perspectives of relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, and impact, and sustainability. In addition to analysis of data and documentation, programme managers, current and former fellows, home and host institutions participated in the evaluation through surveys and interviews. In the current article, the external evaluators, along with CDF programme managers, discuss the results of the evaluation in the broader context of individual and institutional RCS, underlining CDF successes, including transmitting essential skills and networks, and addressing the challenge and fundamental importance of integrating fellows, home and host institutions into an on-going relationship that solidifies and amplifies the benefits of the one-year experience.
Suggested Citation
Michael Käser & Christine Maure & Beatrice M M Halpaap & Mahnaz Vahedi & Sara Yamaka & Pascal Launois & Núria Casamitjana, 2016.
"Research Capacity Strengthening in Low and Middle Income Countries – An Evaluation of the WHO/TDR Career Development Fellowship Programme,"
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(5), pages 1-13, May.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pntd00:0004631
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004631
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