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Published in: Globalization and Health 1/2018

Open Access 01-12-2018 | Commentary

From Kisiizi to Baltimore: cultivating knowledge brokers to support global innovation for community engagement in healthcare

Authors: Chidinma A. Ibe, Lopa Basu, Rachel Gooden, Shamsuzzoha B. Syed, Viva Dadwal, Lee R. Bone, Patti L. Ephraim, Christine M. Weston, Albert W. Wu, for the Baltimore CONNECT Project Team

Published in: Globalization and Health | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Background

Reverse Innovation has been endorsed as a vehicle for promoting bidirectional learning and information flow between low- and middle-income countries and high-income countries, with the aim of tackling common unmet needs. One such need, which traverses international boundaries, is the development of strategies to initiate and sustain community engagement in health care delivery systems.

Objective

In this commentary, we discuss the Baltimore “Community-based Organizations Neighborhood Network: Enhancing Capacity Together” Study. This randomized controlled trial evaluated whether or not a community engagement strategy, developed to address patient safety in low- and middle-income countries throughout sub-Saharan Africa, could be successfully applied to create and implement strategies that would link community-based organizations to a local health care system in Baltimore, a city in the United States. Specifically, we explore the trial’s activation of community knowledge brokers as the conduit through which community engagement, and innovation production, was achieved.

Summary

Cultivating community knowledge brokers holds promise as a vehicle for advancing global innovation in the context of health care delivery systems. As such, further efforts to discern the ways in which they may promote the development and dissemination of innovations in health care systems is warranted.

Trial registration

Trial Registration Number: NCT02222909. Trial Register Name: Reverse Innovation and Patient Engagement to Improve Quality of Care and Patient Outcomes (CONNECT). Date of Trial’s Registration: August 22, 2014.
Literature
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Metadata
Title
From Kisiizi to Baltimore: cultivating knowledge brokers to support global innovation for community engagement in healthcare
Authors
Chidinma A. Ibe
Lopa Basu
Rachel Gooden
Shamsuzzoha B. Syed
Viva Dadwal
Lee R. Bone
Patti L. Ephraim
Christine M. Weston
Albert W. Wu
for the Baltimore CONNECT Project Team
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Globalization and Health / Issue 1/2018
Electronic ISSN: 1744-8603
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12992-018-0339-8

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