TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring health researchers' perceptions of policymaking in Argentina
T2 - A qualitative study
AU - Corluka, Adrijana
AU - Hyder, Adnan A.
AU - Winch, Peter J.
AU - Segura, Elsa
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author 2014; all rights reserved.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Much of the published research on evidence-informed health policymaking in low-and middle-income countries has focused on policymakers, overlooking the role of health researchers in the research-to-policy process. Through 20 semistructured, in-depth qualitative interviews conducted with researchers in Argentina's rural northwest and the capital of Buenos Aires, we explore the perspectives, experiences and attitudes of Argentine health researchers regarding the use and impact of health research in policymaking in Argentina. We find that the researcher, and the researcher's function of generating evidence, is nested within a broader complex system that influences the researcher's interaction with policymaking. This system comprises communities of practice, government departments/civil society organizations, bureaucratic processes and political governance and executive leadership. At the individual level, researcher capacity and determinants of research availability also play a role in contributing to evidence-informed policymaking. In addition, we find a recurrent theme around 'lack of trust' and explore the role of trust within a research system, finding that researchers' distrust towards policymakers and even other researchers are linked inextricably to the sociopolitical history of Argentina, which contributes to shaping researchers' identities in opposition to policymakers. For policymakers, national research councils and funders of national health research systems, this article provides a deeper understanding of researchers' perceptions which can help inform and improve programme design when developing interventions to enhance research utilization and develop equitable and rational health policies. For donors and development agencies interested in health research capacity building and achieving development goals, this research demonstrates a need for investment in building research capacity and training health researchers to interact with the public policy 'world' and enhancing research communications and transferability to decision makers. It also highlights an opportunity to invest in implementation research platforms, such as health policy research and analysis institutions.
AB - Much of the published research on evidence-informed health policymaking in low-and middle-income countries has focused on policymakers, overlooking the role of health researchers in the research-to-policy process. Through 20 semistructured, in-depth qualitative interviews conducted with researchers in Argentina's rural northwest and the capital of Buenos Aires, we explore the perspectives, experiences and attitudes of Argentine health researchers regarding the use and impact of health research in policymaking in Argentina. We find that the researcher, and the researcher's function of generating evidence, is nested within a broader complex system that influences the researcher's interaction with policymaking. This system comprises communities of practice, government departments/civil society organizations, bureaucratic processes and political governance and executive leadership. At the individual level, researcher capacity and determinants of research availability also play a role in contributing to evidence-informed policymaking. In addition, we find a recurrent theme around 'lack of trust' and explore the role of trust within a research system, finding that researchers' distrust towards policymakers and even other researchers are linked inextricably to the sociopolitical history of Argentina, which contributes to shaping researchers' identities in opposition to policymakers. For policymakers, national research councils and funders of national health research systems, this article provides a deeper understanding of researchers' perceptions which can help inform and improve programme design when developing interventions to enhance research utilization and develop equitable and rational health policies. For donors and development agencies interested in health research capacity building and achieving development goals, this research demonstrates a need for investment in building research capacity and training health researchers to interact with the public policy 'world' and enhancing research communications and transferability to decision makers. It also highlights an opportunity to invest in implementation research platforms, such as health policy research and analysis institutions.
KW - Argentina
KW - Evidence-based policymaking
KW - Health research systems
KW - Health researchers
KW - Interviews
KW - Qualitative
KW - Research-to-policy
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U2 - 10.1093/heapol/czu071
DO - 10.1093/heapol/czu071
M3 - Article
C2 - 25274639
AN - SCOPUS:84957814455
SN - 0268-1080
VL - 29
SP - ii40-ii49
JO - Health policy and planning
JF - Health policy and planning
ER -