Building and Sustaining Effective Partnerships for Training the Next Generation of Global Health Leaders

Introduction: Partnerships are essential to creating effective global health leadership training programs. Global pandemics, including the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and more recently the COVID-19 pandemic, have tested the impact and stability of healthcare systems. Partnerships must be fostered to prepare...

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Main Authors: Damalie Nakanjako, Diane Kendall, Nelson Sewankambo, Myat Htoo Razak, Bonface Oduor, Theresa Odero, Patricia Garcia, Carey Farquhar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Levy Library Press 2021-07-01
Series:Annals of Global Health
Online Access:https://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/3214
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author Damalie Nakanjako
Diane Kendall
Nelson Sewankambo
Myat Htoo Razak
Bonface Oduor
Theresa Odero
Patricia Garcia
Carey Farquhar
spellingShingle Damalie Nakanjako
Diane Kendall
Nelson Sewankambo
Myat Htoo Razak
Bonface Oduor
Theresa Odero
Patricia Garcia
Carey Farquhar
Building and Sustaining Effective Partnerships for Training the Next Generation of Global Health Leaders
Annals of Global Health
author_facet Damalie Nakanjako
Diane Kendall
Nelson Sewankambo
Myat Htoo Razak
Bonface Oduor
Theresa Odero
Patricia Garcia
Carey Farquhar
author_sort Damalie Nakanjako
title Building and Sustaining Effective Partnerships for Training the Next Generation of Global Health Leaders
title_short Building and Sustaining Effective Partnerships for Training the Next Generation of Global Health Leaders
title_full Building and Sustaining Effective Partnerships for Training the Next Generation of Global Health Leaders
title_fullStr Building and Sustaining Effective Partnerships for Training the Next Generation of Global Health Leaders
title_full_unstemmed Building and Sustaining Effective Partnerships for Training the Next Generation of Global Health Leaders
title_sort building and sustaining effective partnerships for training the next generation of global health leaders
publisher Levy Library Press
series Annals of Global Health
issn 2214-9996
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Introduction: Partnerships are essential to creating effective global health leadership training programs. Global pandemics, including the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and more recently the COVID-19 pandemic, have tested the impact and stability of healthcare systems. Partnerships must be fostered to prepare the next generation of leaders to collaborate effectively and improve health globally. Objectives: We provide key matrices that predict success of partnerships in building global health leadership capacity. We highlight opportunities and challenges to building effective partnerships and provide recommendations to promote development of equitable and mutually beneficial partnerships. Findings: Critical elements for effective partnership when building global health leadership capacity include shared strategic vision, transparency and excellent communication, as well as intentional monitoring and evaluation of the partnership, not just the project or program. There must be recognition that partnerships can be unpredictable and unequal, especially if the end is not defined early on. Threats to equitable and effective partnerships include funding and co-funding disparities between partners from high-income and low-income countries, inequalities, unshared vision and priorities, skewed decision-making levels, and limited flexibility to minimize inequalities and make changes. Further, imbalances in power, privilege, position, income levels, and institutional resources create opportunities for exploitation of partners, particularly those in low-income countries, which widens the disparities and limits success and sustainability of partnerships. These challenges to effective partnering create the need for objective documentation of disparities at all stages, with key milestones to assess success and the environment to sustain the partnerships and their respective goals. Conclusions: Developing effective and sustainable partnerships requires a commitment to equality from the start by all partners and an understanding that there will be challenges that could derail otherwise well-intended partnerships. Guidelines and training on evaluation of partnerships exist and should be used, including generic indicators of equity, mutual benefit, and the added value of partnering. Key Takeaways Effective partnerships in building global health leadership capacity require shared strategic vision and intentional monitoring and evaluation of goals Inequalities in partnerships may arise from disparities in infrastructure, managerial expertise, administrative and leadership capacity, as well as limited mutual benefit and mutual respect To promote equitable and effective partnerships, it is critical to highlight and monitor key measures for success of partnerships at the beginning of each partnership and regularly through the lifetime of the partnership. We recommend that partnerships should have legal and financial laws through executed memoranda of understanding, to promote accountability and facilitate objective monitoring and evaluation of the partnership itself. More research is needed to understand better the contextual predictors of the broader influence and sustainability of partnership networks in global health leadership training.
url https://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/3214
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spelling doaj-95e1ea8e41274061b10c893768f02d592021-08-11T07:57:08ZengLevy Library PressAnnals of Global Health2214-99962021-07-0187110.5334/aogh.32142648Building and Sustaining Effective Partnerships for Training the Next Generation of Global Health LeadersDamalie Nakanjako0Diane Kendall1Nelson Sewankambo2Myat Htoo Razak3Bonface Oduor4Theresa Odero5Patricia Garcia6Carey Farquhar7Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, UG; Afya Bora ConsortiumSpeech & Hearing Sciences, University of Washington, SeattleDepartment of Medicine, School of Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, UG; Afya Bora ConsortiumIndependent researcherInternational Cancer Institute, EldoretCollege of Health Sciences, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, KE; Afya Bora ConsortiumUniversidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, LimaDepartments of Global Health, Medicine and Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle, US; Afya Bora ConsortiumIntroduction: Partnerships are essential to creating effective global health leadership training programs. Global pandemics, including the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and more recently the COVID-19 pandemic, have tested the impact and stability of healthcare systems. Partnerships must be fostered to prepare the next generation of leaders to collaborate effectively and improve health globally. Objectives: We provide key matrices that predict success of partnerships in building global health leadership capacity. We highlight opportunities and challenges to building effective partnerships and provide recommendations to promote development of equitable and mutually beneficial partnerships. Findings: Critical elements for effective partnership when building global health leadership capacity include shared strategic vision, transparency and excellent communication, as well as intentional monitoring and evaluation of the partnership, not just the project or program. There must be recognition that partnerships can be unpredictable and unequal, especially if the end is not defined early on. Threats to equitable and effective partnerships include funding and co-funding disparities between partners from high-income and low-income countries, inequalities, unshared vision and priorities, skewed decision-making levels, and limited flexibility to minimize inequalities and make changes. Further, imbalances in power, privilege, position, income levels, and institutional resources create opportunities for exploitation of partners, particularly those in low-income countries, which widens the disparities and limits success and sustainability of partnerships. These challenges to effective partnering create the need for objective documentation of disparities at all stages, with key milestones to assess success and the environment to sustain the partnerships and their respective goals. Conclusions: Developing effective and sustainable partnerships requires a commitment to equality from the start by all partners and an understanding that there will be challenges that could derail otherwise well-intended partnerships. Guidelines and training on evaluation of partnerships exist and should be used, including generic indicators of equity, mutual benefit, and the added value of partnering. Key Takeaways Effective partnerships in building global health leadership capacity require shared strategic vision and intentional monitoring and evaluation of goals Inequalities in partnerships may arise from disparities in infrastructure, managerial expertise, administrative and leadership capacity, as well as limited mutual benefit and mutual respect To promote equitable and effective partnerships, it is critical to highlight and monitor key measures for success of partnerships at the beginning of each partnership and regularly through the lifetime of the partnership. We recommend that partnerships should have legal and financial laws through executed memoranda of understanding, to promote accountability and facilitate objective monitoring and evaluation of the partnership itself. More research is needed to understand better the contextual predictors of the broader influence and sustainability of partnership networks in global health leadership training.https://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/3214