Sunday, May 18, 2008

Research and sub-Saharan Africa

The first days of the conference have been long but interesting (at least, parts of it). I was not as excited about the dozens of slides of graphs of green and red dots that demonstrate the results of microarrays and various molecular technologies.

But there was a great review of the state of the art of malaria research, TB and novel HIV vaccine targets.

The workshop on building research capacity in Africa was great though. The perspectives ranged from very accomplished, well funded, well respected researchers to very disillusioned people saying essentially “the man with the key is gone” (a uniquely Ugandan way of saying the problem is out of my hands). While some speakers complained that there was no funds available for Africans to contribute to research, a Sudanese physician and research leader (who sits on review boards, trains students and is involved in international research) who sits on funding review boards remarked that he feels that there is much potential funding that African researchers don’t get because of a lack of quality proposals.

One message that came through loud and clear that one of the needs was in teaching African medical students, residents and health workers about how to write a good proposal, execute a study and then write it up which is the goal of one part of an upcoming UBC – Makerere collaboration. The lack of skilled mentors was also mentioned as a concern. So it seems like an ideal time for UBC / CICH to be working on such a project.

2 comments:

Beachcomber said...

It does seem like things are falling together nicely for this collaboration and partnership. I hope it can benefit African researchers and health professionals long term by helping them build the skills within Africa to write proposals, execute studies and build up their own mentorship network over the years. Wouldn't that be awesome??

Beachcomber said...

Oh. One more thing. When can you Skype?
I miss you .... :(