Initiatives supporting evidence informed health system policymaking in Cameroon and Uganda: A comparative historical case study
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Date
2014-11Author
Ongolo-Zogo, Pierre
Lavis, John N.
Tomson, Goran
Sewankambo, Nelson K.
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Background: There is a scarcity of empirical data on institutions devoted to knowledge brokerage and their influence
in Africa. Our objective was to describe two pioneering Knowledge Translation Platforms (KTPs) supporting evidence
informed health system policymaking (EIHSP) in Cameroon and Uganda since 2006.
Methods: This comparative historical case study of Evidence Informed Policy Network (EVIPNet) Cameroon and
Regional East African Community Health Policy Initiative (REACH-PI) Uganda using multiple methods comprised
(i) a descriptive documentary analysis for a narrative historical account, (ii) an interpretive documentary analysis
of the context, profiles, activities and outputs inventories and (iii) an evaluative survey of stakeholders exposed to
evidence briefs produced and policy dialogues organized by the KTPs.
Results: Both initiatives benefited from the technical and scientific support from the global EVIPNet resource group.
EVIPNet Cameroon secretariat operates with a multidisciplinary group of part-time researchers in a teaching hospital
closely linked to the ministry of health. REACH-PI Uganda secretariat operates with a smaller team of full time staff in a
public university. Financial resources were mobilized from external donors to scale up capacity building, knowledge
management, and linkage and exchange activities. Between 2008 and 2012, twelve evidence briefs were produced in
Cameroon and three in Uganda. In 2012, six rapid evidence syntheses in response to stakeholders’ urgent needs were
produced in Cameroon against 73 in Uganda between 2010 and 2012. Ten policy dialogues (seven in Cameroon and
three in Uganda) informed by pre-circulated evidence briefs were well received. Both KTPs contributed to developing
and testing new resources and tools for EIHSP. A network of local and global experts has created new spaces for
evidence informed deliberations on priority health policy issues related to MDGs.
Conclusion: This descriptive historical account of two KTPs housed in government institutions in Africa illustrates
how the convergence of local and global factors and agents has enabled in-country efforts to support evidence-informed
deliberations on priority health policy issues and lays the ground for further work to assess their influence on the
climate for EIHSP and specific health policy processes.