logo

Make your research proposals and output easy to understand, researchers told

APHRC boss Catherine Kyobutungi said there is enough research out there but it's poorly understood

image
by ELISHA SINGIRA

Health23 June 2025 - 14:53
ADVERTISEMENT

In Summary


    Vocalize Pre-Player Loader

    Audio By Vocalize

    Emilie Oftedal, Prof Dean Karlan, Catherine Kyobutungi, and Amos Njuguna at the Africa Evidence Summit where they presided over the Keynote panel discussions.

    Experts have called on researchers to ground their proposals on evidence, and in a simple way that is easy for donors to understand and appreciate.

    They spoke at the Africa Evidence Summit in Nairobi, organised to spotlight research in Africa with a focus on the economic empowerment of the continent.

    Dean Karlan, professor of Economics and Finance, Northwestern University and co-director, Global Poverty Research lab, hailed the summit for bringing together specialists to figure out how to make the best use of available resources to fight existing health problems.

    “Evidence is a path towards being as effective as we can. It helps us to implement programmes some of which are at higher level. It helps in the design of intervention mechanisms by the government and nonprofit organisations. We need to think about the collection of evidence and how best to present the evidence through the people that are well versed with the field of research,” Prof Karlan said.

    On her part, Emilie Oftedal, senior advisor, Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad), appreciated the benefits of evidence in response to the global funding upheavals.

    “This forum has brought together researchers, policy makers and academicians who are technically the stakeholders in research and pioneers of global policy on health, agriculture and climate change in sub-Saharan Africa. Therefore, focusing on evidence will help in getting as much as possible out of the resources that is still there,” she said.

    Prof Amos Njunguna, chair of the Network of Impact Evaluation Researchers in Africa (NIERA), emphasised the need for policy makers to make use of the research reports as provided by researchers.

    He called on researchers to make reports easy to understand for the implementers. “This is the simplest way to treat malaria” rather than coming up with complex narratives in passing that information.

    Catherine Kyobutungi, executive director of the African Population and Health Research Centre (APHRC), acknowledged there is enough research out there but the implementation is poor, which is largely attributed to lack of understanding of the research by the policy makers and governments.

    “For governments and policymakers to understand research, it needs to start from defining problems. There are mechanisms in which researchers can sit with government and know that this is the most important thing for the government, and then now design research questions that are aligned with the problems to solve," she said.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Love Health? Stay Connected!

    Be part of an exclusive group of enthusiasts! Get fresh content, expert advice and exciting updates in your inbox with our health newsletter.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    logo© The Star 2024. All rights reserved