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Learning lessons from operational research in infectious diseases: can the same model be used for noncommunicable diseases in developing countries?

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Learning lessons from operational research in infectious diseases: can the same model be used for noncommunicable diseases in developing countries? / Bosu, William.
In: Advances in Medical Education and Practice, Vol. 14, No. 5, 04.12.2014, p. 469-482.

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@article{2227f377e708470cb59a56425cffac79,
title = "Learning lessons from operational research in infectious diseases: can the same model be used for noncommunicable diseases in developing countries?",
abstract = "About three-quarters of global deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) occur in developing countries. Nearly a third of these deaths occur before the age of 60 years. These deaths are projected to increase, fueled by such factors as urbanization, nutrition transition, lifestyle changes, and aging. Despite this burden, there is a paucity of research on NCDs, due to the higher priority given to infectious disease research. Less than 10% of research on cardiovascular diseases comes from developing countries. This paper assesses what lessons from operational research on infectious diseases could be applied to NCDs. The lessons are drawn from the priority setting for research, integration of research into programs and routine service delivery, the use of routine data, rapid-assessment survey methods, modeling, chemoprophylaxis, and the translational process of findings into policy and practice. With the lines between infectious diseases and NCDs becoming blurred, it is justifiable to integrate the programs for the two disease groups wherever possible, eg, screening for diabetes in tuberculosis. Applying these lessons will require increased political will, research capacity, ownership, use of local expertise, and research funding.",
keywords = "operational research, Noncommunicable diseases, developing countries",
author = "William Bosu",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
day = "4",
doi = "10.2147/AMEP.S47412",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "469--482",
journal = "Advances in Medical Education and Practice",
publisher = "Dove Press",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Learning lessons from operational research in infectious diseases

T2 - can the same model be used for noncommunicable diseases in developing countries?

AU - Bosu, William

PY - 2014/12/4

Y1 - 2014/12/4

N2 - About three-quarters of global deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) occur in developing countries. Nearly a third of these deaths occur before the age of 60 years. These deaths are projected to increase, fueled by such factors as urbanization, nutrition transition, lifestyle changes, and aging. Despite this burden, there is a paucity of research on NCDs, due to the higher priority given to infectious disease research. Less than 10% of research on cardiovascular diseases comes from developing countries. This paper assesses what lessons from operational research on infectious diseases could be applied to NCDs. The lessons are drawn from the priority setting for research, integration of research into programs and routine service delivery, the use of routine data, rapid-assessment survey methods, modeling, chemoprophylaxis, and the translational process of findings into policy and practice. With the lines between infectious diseases and NCDs becoming blurred, it is justifiable to integrate the programs for the two disease groups wherever possible, eg, screening for diabetes in tuberculosis. Applying these lessons will require increased political will, research capacity, ownership, use of local expertise, and research funding.

AB - About three-quarters of global deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) occur in developing countries. Nearly a third of these deaths occur before the age of 60 years. These deaths are projected to increase, fueled by such factors as urbanization, nutrition transition, lifestyle changes, and aging. Despite this burden, there is a paucity of research on NCDs, due to the higher priority given to infectious disease research. Less than 10% of research on cardiovascular diseases comes from developing countries. This paper assesses what lessons from operational research on infectious diseases could be applied to NCDs. The lessons are drawn from the priority setting for research, integration of research into programs and routine service delivery, the use of routine data, rapid-assessment survey methods, modeling, chemoprophylaxis, and the translational process of findings into policy and practice. With the lines between infectious diseases and NCDs becoming blurred, it is justifiable to integrate the programs for the two disease groups wherever possible, eg, screening for diabetes in tuberculosis. Applying these lessons will require increased political will, research capacity, ownership, use of local expertise, and research funding.

KW - operational research

KW - Noncommunicable diseases

KW - developing countries

U2 - 10.2147/AMEP.S47412

DO - 10.2147/AMEP.S47412

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 469

EP - 482

JO - Advances in Medical Education and Practice

JF - Advances in Medical Education and Practice

IS - 5

ER -