학술논문

Power, potential, and pitfalls in global health academic partnerships: review and reflections on an approach in Nepal
Document Type
article
Source
Global Health Action. 10(1)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Public Health
Health Sciences
Clinical Research
Health Services
Generic health relevance
Partnerships for the Goals
Good Health and Well Being
Global Health
Health Equity
Health Personnel
Humans
Interinstitutional Relations
Leadership
Nepal
Perception
San Francisco
Universities
Workflow
Global health
partnership
health equity
training support
Public Health and Health Services
Epidemiology
Public health
Language
Abstract
BackgroundGlobal health academic partnerships are centered around a core tension: they often mirror or reproduce the very cross-national inequities they seek to alleviate. On the one hand, they risk worsening power dynamics that perpetuate health disparities; on the other, they form an essential response to the need for healthcare resources to reach marginalized populations across the globe.ObjectivesThis study characterizes the broader landscape of global health academic partnerships, including challenges to developing ethical, equitable, and sustainable models. It then lays out guiding principles of the specific partnership approach, and considers how lessons learned might be applied in other resource-limited settings.MethodsThe experience of a partnership between the Ministry of Health in Nepal, the non-profit healthcare provider Possible, and the Health Equity Action and Leadership Initiative at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine was reviewed. The quality and effectiveness of the partnership was assessed using the Tropical Health and Education Trust Principles of Partnership framework.ResultsVarious strategies can be taken by partnerships to better align the perspectives of patients and public sector providers with those of expatriate physicians. Actions can also be taken to bring greater equity to the wealth and power gaps inherent within global health academic partnerships.ConclusionsThis study provides recommendations gleaned from the analysis, with an aim towards both future refinement of the partnership and broader applications of its lessons and principles. It specifically highlights the importance of targeted engagements with academic medical centers and the need for efficient organizational work-flow practices. It considers how to both prioritize national and host institution goals, and meet the career development needs of global health clinicians.