Needs, Gaps and Opportunities for Infectious Disease Research in British Columbia: A Perspective from Population and Public Health

Background: A review of infectious disease research activity and capacity was performed in British Columbia and linked to a process for identifying needs, gaps and opportunities from a public health perspective. Methods: The study was organized in three phases: an environmental scan to describe curr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of public health 2006-09, Vol.97, p.S24-S32
Hauptverfasser: Patrick, David M., Remple, Valencia P., Kendall, Perry, Brunham, Robert C.
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creator Patrick, David M.
Remple, Valencia P.
Kendall, Perry
Brunham, Robert C.
description Background: A review of infectious disease research activity and capacity was performed in British Columbia and linked to a process for identifying needs, gaps and opportunities from a public health perspective. Methods: The study was organized in three phases: an environmental scan to describe current research activity in BC; a consultation to identify needs, gaps and opportunities with those conducting research (key informants) and the end users of research results (stakeholders); and a prioritization of the research needs emerging from the consultation. Results: Analysis and synthesis of the consultation data resulted in the identification of nine research themes, which were prioritized in the following order: efficacy and costbenefit, disease patterns, emerging infectious disease, immunology and vaccines, diseasespecific research, health promotion and communications, safe food and water, knowledge translation research and genomics. Six capacity-building themes were also identified: attraction and retention, education and training, collaboration and networks, funding, dissemination of findings, and public health input, surveillance, informatics and databases. Interpretation: The findings were helpful in developing a multi-disciplinary, multi-level infectious disease research agenda linking researchers in universities, hospitals and public health institutions with practitioners and policy-makers in British Columbia's public health system. The approach is both feasible and important to undertake at the national level.
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Methods: The study was organized in three phases: an environmental scan to describe current research activity in BC; a consultation to identify needs, gaps and opportunities with those conducting research (key informants) and the end users of research results (stakeholders); and a prioritization of the research needs emerging from the consultation. Results: Analysis and synthesis of the consultation data resulted in the identification of nine research themes, which were prioritized in the following order: efficacy and costbenefit, disease patterns, emerging infectious disease, immunology and vaccines, diseasespecific research, health promotion and communications, safe food and water, knowledge translation research and genomics. Six capacity-building themes were also identified: attraction and retention, education and training, collaboration and networks, funding, dissemination of findings, and public health input, surveillance, informatics and databases. Interpretation: The findings were helpful in developing a multi-disciplinary, multi-level infectious disease research agenda linking researchers in universities, hospitals and public health institutions with practitioners and policy-makers in British Columbia's public health system. 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source MEDLINE; SpringerNature Journals; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects British Columbia
Communicable Disease Control
Communicable Diseases
Cooperative Behavior
Epidemiology
Funding
Genomics
Health Policy
Health Resources - utilization
Health Services Needs and Demand
Health Services Research
Humans
Immunization Programs
Infectious diseases
Interviews as Topic
Medical research
Pathology
Population Surveillance
Preventive medicine
Public health
Public Health Administration
Research methods
Staphylococcus infections
Studies
Surveillance
Vaccination
Vaccines
title Needs, Gaps and Opportunities for Infectious Disease Research in British Columbia: A Perspective from Population and Public Health
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