Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Doctoral dissertation |
Title | Developing an Implementation Research Program for Quality and Equity: Exploring the Context, Adaptation, and Measurement Challenges of Maternal and Child Health Implementation Research in Rural Nepal |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
Abstract | In this paper, I examine the emerging field of implementation research as a multidisciplinary field of study (1) and an urgent call to action to facilitate the adoption of evidence into practice and to develop responsive healthcare systems that address healthcare quality and equity (2-4) particularly to accelerate progress in maternal and child survival (5). Over the past eighteen months, Possible, a nonprofit that runs a rural hospital in a partnership with the government of Nepal, has been developing an implementation research program embedded within expanding direct healthcare delivery capacity. This is distinct from, say, using the hospital or community as a partner site for efficacy-oriented studies or from creating an implementation research program within an already well-formed organizational or healthcare delivery framework (2). Possible made this decision as part of a core strategy to build a learning, adaptive healthcare system in rural Nepal (6). This experience highlights some of the challenges of defining, creating strategy for, and executing on implementation research in resource-limited settings. |
» | Nepal - Population and Housing Census 2011 |