Supporting capacity for research on malaria in Africa

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Supporting capacity for research on malaria in Africa. / Greenwood, Brian; Gaye, Oumar; Kamya, Moses R; Kibiki, Gibson; Mwapasa, Victor; Phiri, Kamija S; Tagbor, Harry; Terlouw, Dianne; Bates, Imelda; Craig, Alister; Magnussen, Pascal; Theander, Thor G; Bhasin, Amit; McCullough, Hazel; Schellenberg, David.

I: BMJ Global Health, Bind 3, Nr. 2, e000723, 2018.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Greenwood, B, Gaye, O, Kamya, MR, Kibiki, G, Mwapasa, V, Phiri, KS, Tagbor, H, Terlouw, D, Bates, I, Craig, A, Magnussen, P, Theander, TG, Bhasin, A, McCullough, H & Schellenberg, D 2018, 'Supporting capacity for research on malaria in Africa', BMJ Global Health, bind 3, nr. 2, e000723. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000723

APA

Greenwood, B., Gaye, O., Kamya, M. R., Kibiki, G., Mwapasa, V., Phiri, K. S., Tagbor, H., Terlouw, D., Bates, I., Craig, A., Magnussen, P., Theander, T. G., Bhasin, A., McCullough, H., & Schellenberg, D. (2018). Supporting capacity for research on malaria in Africa. BMJ Global Health, 3(2), [e000723]. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000723

Vancouver

Greenwood B, Gaye O, Kamya MR, Kibiki G, Mwapasa V, Phiri KS o.a. Supporting capacity for research on malaria in Africa. BMJ Global Health. 2018;3(2). e000723. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000723

Author

Greenwood, Brian ; Gaye, Oumar ; Kamya, Moses R ; Kibiki, Gibson ; Mwapasa, Victor ; Phiri, Kamija S ; Tagbor, Harry ; Terlouw, Dianne ; Bates, Imelda ; Craig, Alister ; Magnussen, Pascal ; Theander, Thor G ; Bhasin, Amit ; McCullough, Hazel ; Schellenberg, David. / Supporting capacity for research on malaria in Africa. I: BMJ Global Health. 2018 ; Bind 3, Nr. 2.

Bibtex

@article{66e2c551aca04c8da0c53fb258cc0d0e,
title = "Supporting capacity for research on malaria in Africa",
abstract = "Substantial progress has been made in the control of malaria in Africa but much remains to be done before malaria elimination on the continent can be achieved. Further progress can be made by enhancing uptake of existing control tools but, in high transmission areas, additional tools will be needed. Development and evaluation of these new tools will require a substantial cadre of African scientists well trained in many different disciplines. This paper describes the activities undertaken by the Malaria Capacity Development Consortium (MCDC) to support the careers of PhD students and postdoctoral fellows undertaking research on malaria at five African universities. A systematic assessment of constraints on PhD training and research support systems was undertaken at each partner African university at the beginning of the programme and many of these constraints were remedied. The success of the programme is shown by the fact that 18 of the 21 PhD students recruited to the programme completed their theses successfully within a 4-year period and that all 27 scientists recruited to the postdoctoral programme were still working in Africa on its completion. The work of the consortium will be continued through Career Development Groups established at each partner university and at an affiliated institution at the University of Nairobi and through the Developing Excellence in Leadership, Training and Science award from the Wellcome Trust made to one of the African partners. Lessons learnt during the MCDC programme may help the planning and execution of other research capacity development programmes in Africa.",
author = "Brian Greenwood and Oumar Gaye and Kamya, {Moses R} and Gibson Kibiki and Victor Mwapasa and Phiri, {Kamija S} and Harry Tagbor and Dianne Terlouw and Imelda Bates and Alister Craig and Pascal Magnussen and Theander, {Thor G} and Amit Bhasin and Hazel McCullough and David Schellenberg",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000723",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
journal = "BMJ Global Health",
issn = "2059-7908",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Supporting capacity for research on malaria in Africa

AU - Greenwood, Brian

AU - Gaye, Oumar

AU - Kamya, Moses R

AU - Kibiki, Gibson

AU - Mwapasa, Victor

AU - Phiri, Kamija S

AU - Tagbor, Harry

AU - Terlouw, Dianne

AU - Bates, Imelda

AU - Craig, Alister

AU - Magnussen, Pascal

AU - Theander, Thor G

AU - Bhasin, Amit

AU - McCullough, Hazel

AU - Schellenberg, David

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Substantial progress has been made in the control of malaria in Africa but much remains to be done before malaria elimination on the continent can be achieved. Further progress can be made by enhancing uptake of existing control tools but, in high transmission areas, additional tools will be needed. Development and evaluation of these new tools will require a substantial cadre of African scientists well trained in many different disciplines. This paper describes the activities undertaken by the Malaria Capacity Development Consortium (MCDC) to support the careers of PhD students and postdoctoral fellows undertaking research on malaria at five African universities. A systematic assessment of constraints on PhD training and research support systems was undertaken at each partner African university at the beginning of the programme and many of these constraints were remedied. The success of the programme is shown by the fact that 18 of the 21 PhD students recruited to the programme completed their theses successfully within a 4-year period and that all 27 scientists recruited to the postdoctoral programme were still working in Africa on its completion. The work of the consortium will be continued through Career Development Groups established at each partner university and at an affiliated institution at the University of Nairobi and through the Developing Excellence in Leadership, Training and Science award from the Wellcome Trust made to one of the African partners. Lessons learnt during the MCDC programme may help the planning and execution of other research capacity development programmes in Africa.

AB - Substantial progress has been made in the control of malaria in Africa but much remains to be done before malaria elimination on the continent can be achieved. Further progress can be made by enhancing uptake of existing control tools but, in high transmission areas, additional tools will be needed. Development and evaluation of these new tools will require a substantial cadre of African scientists well trained in many different disciplines. This paper describes the activities undertaken by the Malaria Capacity Development Consortium (MCDC) to support the careers of PhD students and postdoctoral fellows undertaking research on malaria at five African universities. A systematic assessment of constraints on PhD training and research support systems was undertaken at each partner African university at the beginning of the programme and many of these constraints were remedied. The success of the programme is shown by the fact that 18 of the 21 PhD students recruited to the programme completed their theses successfully within a 4-year period and that all 27 scientists recruited to the postdoctoral programme were still working in Africa on its completion. The work of the consortium will be continued through Career Development Groups established at each partner university and at an affiliated institution at the University of Nairobi and through the Developing Excellence in Leadership, Training and Science award from the Wellcome Trust made to one of the African partners. Lessons learnt during the MCDC programme may help the planning and execution of other research capacity development programmes in Africa.

U2 - 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000723

DO - 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000723

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29662697

VL - 3

JO - BMJ Global Health

JF - BMJ Global Health

SN - 2059-7908

IS - 2

M1 - e000723

ER -

ID: 195257958