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18 result(s)
Journal Article > LetterSubscription Only

Equitable access needed in clinical research

Science. 28 March 2025; Volume 387 (Issue 6741); 1361-1362.; DOI:10.1126/science.adv2394
Dang G, Perrin C, Furin J
Science. 28 March 2025; Volume 387 (Issue 6741); 1361-1362.; DOI:10.1126/science.adv2394
Journal Article > ReviewFull Text

Improving equitable access for effective antibacterial: An ecosystem approach

Clin Microbiol Infect. 1 March 2025; Volume 31 (Issue 3); 339-344.; DOI:10.1016/j.cmi.2024.06.015
Cohn J, Balasegaram M, Srinivasan H, Menghaney L, Mpundu M,  et al.
Clin Microbiol Infect. 1 March 2025; Volume 31 (Issue 3); 339-344.; DOI:10.1016/j.cmi.2024.06.015

BACKGROUND

Antibiotics are indispensable to modern healthcare, yet their equitable access remains a pressing global challenge. Factors contributing to inequities include insufficient evidence for optimal clinical use, limited registration, pricing for Reserve antibiotics, and supply chain challenges. These issues disproportionately affect low- and middle-income countries, exacerbating antimicrobial resistance burdens.


OBJECTIVES

This paper explores the multifaceted dimensions of inequitable antibiotic access and proposes a comprehensive framework to address the crisis.


SOURCES

Published articles, grey literature analysis, and the authors' own expertise contributed to this article.


CONTENT

While much attention has been paid to push-and-pull incentives for antibiotic development, these interventions are inadequate to reach sustainable and equitable access to antibiotics. Improving equitable antibiotic access requires an ecosystem approach, involving multiple stakeholders and including public–private partnerships. The paper advocates for initiatives spanning research and development, regulatory pathways, procurement strategies, and financing mechanisms and suggests concrete interventions in each of these areas. The specific interventions and mix of public and private actors may vary according to antibiotic, market, and health system context, but must be designed to meet public health needs while also supporting a market that will sustain quality-assured production and delivery of antibiotics.


IMPLICATIONS

Addressing the challenge of equitable antibiotic access requires coordinated efforts across sectors and regions. By embracing an ecosystem approach centred on public health priorities, stakeholders can pave the way for a sustainable supply of antibiotics, and equitable access, safeguarding the future of global healthcare amidst the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance.


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Journal Article > ReviewFull Text

Unfair knowledge practices in global health: a realist synthesis

Health Policy Plan. 3 June 2024; Volume 39 (Issue 6); 636-650.; DOI:10.1093/heapol/czae030
Abimbola S, van de Kamp J, Lariat J, Rathod L, Klipstein-Grobusch K,  et al.
Health Policy Plan. 3 June 2024; Volume 39 (Issue 6); 636-650.; DOI:10.1093/heapol/czae030

Unfair knowledge practices easily beset our efforts to achieve health equity within and between countries. Enacted by people from a distance and from a position of power (‘the centre’) on behalf of and alongside people with less power (‘the periphery’), these unfair practices have generated a complex literature of complaints across various axes of inequity. We identified a sample of this literature from 12 journals and systematized it using the realist approach to explanation. We framed the outcome to be explained as ‘manifestations of unfair knowledge practices’; their generative mechanisms as ‘the reasoning of individuals or rationale of institutions’; and context that enable them as ‘conditions that give knowledge practices their structure’. We identified four categories of unfair knowledge practices, each triggered by three mechanisms: (1) credibility deficit related to pose (mechanisms: ‘the periphery’s cultural knowledge, technical knowledge and “articulation” of knowledge do not matter’), (2) credibility deficit related to gaze (mechanisms: ‘the centre’s learning needs, knowledge platforms and scholarly standards must drive collective knowledge-making’), (3) interpretive marginalization related to pose (mechanisms: ‘the periphery’s sensemaking of partnerships, problems and social reality do not matter’) and (4) interpretive marginalization related to gaze (mechanisms: ‘the centre’s learning needs, social sensitivities and status preservation must drive collective sensemaking’). Together, six mutually overlapping, reinforcing and dependent categories of context influence all 12 mechanisms: ‘mislabelling’ (the periphery as inferior), ‘miseducation’ (on structural origins of disadvantage), ‘under-representation’ (of the periphery on knowledge platforms), ‘compounded spoils’ (enjoyed by the centre), ‘under-governance’ (in making, changing, monitoring, enforcing and applying rules for fair engagement) and ‘colonial mentality’ (of/at the periphery). These context–mechanism–outcome linkages can inform efforts to redress unfair knowledge practices, investigations of unfair knowledge practices across disciplines and axes of inequity and ethics guidelines for health system research and practice when working at a social or physical distance.

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Journal Article > CommentaryFull Text

Involving older people in the preparedness, response, and recovery phases in humanitarian emergencies: a theoretical framework on ageism, epistemic injustice, and participation

Lancet Healthy Longev Healthy longevity. 1 January 2024; Volume 5 (Issue 1); e76-e82.; DOI:10.1016/S2666-7568(23)00244-1
van Boetzelaer E, van de Kamp J, Keating P, Sharma SK, Pellecchia U,  et al.
Lancet Healthy Longev Healthy longevity. 1 January 2024; Volume 5 (Issue 1); e76-e82.; DOI:10.1016/S2666-7568(23)00244-1
Journal Article > CommentaryFull Text

Taking action on racism and structural violence in psychiatric training and clinical practice

Can J Psychiatry. 1 October 2023; Volume 68 (Issue 10); 780-808.; DOI:10.1177/07067437231166985
Jarvis GE, Andermann L, Ayonrinde OA, Beder M, Cénat JM,  et al.
Can J Psychiatry. 1 October 2023; Volume 68 (Issue 10); 780-808.; DOI:10.1177/07067437231166985
Journal Article > CommentaryFull Text

Behind-the-scenes investment for equity in global health research

N Engl J Med. 2 February 2023; Volume 388 (Issue 5); 387-390.; DOI:10.1056/NEJMp2213809
Haberer JE, Boum Y
N Engl J Med. 2 February 2023; Volume 388 (Issue 5); 387-390.; DOI:10.1056/NEJMp2213809
Journal Article > CommentaryFull Text

Striving towards true equity in global health: A checklist for bilateral research partnerships

PLOS Glob Public Health. 18 January 2023; Volume 3 (Issue 1); e0001418.; DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0001418
Hodson DZ, Etoundi YM, Parikh S, Boum Y
PLOS Glob Public Health. 18 January 2023; Volume 3 (Issue 1); e0001418.; DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0001418
Interest in “global health” among schools of medicine, public health, and other health disciplines in high-income countries (HIC) continues to rise. Persistent power imbalances, racism, and maintenance of colonialism/neocolonialism plague global health efforts, including global health scholarship. Scholarly projects conducted in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) by trainees at these schools in HIC often exacerbate these problems. Drawing on published literature and shared experiences, we review key inequalities within each phase of research, from design through implementation and analysis/dissemination, and make concrete and practical recommendations to improve equity at each stage. Key problems facing global health scholarship include HIC-centric nature of global health organizations, paucity of funding directly available for LMIC investigators and trainees, misplaced emphasis on HIC selected issues rather than local solutions to local problems, the dominance of English language in the scientific literature, and exploitation of LMIC team members. Four key principles lie at the foundation of all our recommendations: 1) seek locally derived and relevant solutions to global health issues, 2) create paired collaborations between HIC and LMIC institutions at all levels of training, 3) provide funding for both HIC and LMIC team members, 4) assign clear roles and responsibilities to value, leverage, and share the strengths of all team members. When funding for global health research is predicated upon more ethical and equitable collaborations, the nature of global health collaborations will evolve to be more ethical and equitable. Therefore, we propose the Douala Equity Checklist as a 20-item tool HIC and LMIC institutions can use throughout the conduct of global health projects to ensure more equitable collaborations.More
Journal Article > ResearchFull Text

Gender equity in health research publishing in Africa

BMJ Glob Health. 12 July 2022; Volume 7 (Issue 7); e008821.; DOI:10.1136/bmjgh-2022-008821
Baobeid A, Faghani-Hamadani T, Sauer SM, Boum Y II, Hedt-Gauthier BL,  et al.
BMJ Glob Health. 12 July 2022; Volume 7 (Issue 7); e008821.; DOI:10.1136/bmjgh-2022-008821
INTRODUCTION
Women researchers find it more difficult to publish in academic journals than men, an inequity that affects women's careers and was exacerbated during the pandemic, particularly for women in low-income and middle-income countries. We measured publishing by sub-Saharan African (SSA) women in prestigious authorship positions (first or last author, or single author) during the time frame 2014-2016. We also examined policies and practices at journals publishing high rates of women scientists from sub-Saharan Africa, to identify potential structural enablers affecting these women in publishing.

METHODS
The study used Namsor V.2, an application programming interface, to conduct a secondary analysis of a bibliometric database. We also analysed policies and practices of ten journals with the highest number of SSA women publishing in first authorship positions.

RESULTS
Based on regional analyses, the greatest magnitude of authorship inequity is in papers from sub-Saharan Africa, where men comprised 61% of first authors, 65% of last authors and 66% of single authors. Women from South Africa and Nigeria had greater success in publishing than those from other SSA countries, though women represented at least 20% of last authors in 25 SSA countries. The journals that published the most SSA women as prominent authors are journals based in SSA. Journals with overwhelmingly male leadership are also among those publishing the highest number of SSA women.

CONCLUSION
Women scholars in SSA face substantial gender inequities in publishing in prestigious authorship positions in academic journals, though there is a cadre of women research leaders across the region. Journals in SSA are important for local women scholars and the inequities SSA women researchers face are not necessarily attributable to gender discrepancy in journals' editorial leadership.
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Conference Material > Video

“We tell them to sit, listen to information, and take their medicine": perceptions, practices, and potential for community engagement within MSF

Schittecatte G
MSF Scientific Days International 2022. 7 June 2022; DOI:10.57740/gtpv-x449
Conference Material > Video

A tour of the MSF Science Portal

Kahn P, Burgess B, Leader C, Chaudhuri J
MSF Scientific Days International 2022. 10 May 2022; DOI:10.57740/4q7j-xg61