Sustaining stakeholder engagement for health research during the COVID-19 pandemic: Lessons from the RESPIRE programme in Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, and Pakistan
J Glob Health
.
2022 Sep 3:12:03057.
doi: 10.7189/jogh.12.03057.
Authors
Genevie Fernandes
1
,
Tracy Jackson
1
,
Aaliyan Kashif
2
,
Ahmed Ehsanur Rahman
3
,
Ajay Kumar Roy
4
,
Ashraful Islam Asmd
5
,
Biswajit Paul
6
,
Dhiraj Agarwal
7
,
Fahmeda Akter
5
,
Farishtey Muanka
3
,
G M Monsur Habib
4
,
Hana Mahmood
2
,
Harsh Regi
6
,
Himangi Lubree
7
,
Jayakayatri Jeevajothi Nathan
8
,
Osman Mohammad Yusuf
9
,
Ramsha Tariq Baig
9
,
Rita Isaac
6
,
Rutuja Patil
7
,
Sabrina Jabeen
3
,
Salahuddin Ahmed
5
,
Mohammad Shahidul Islam
10
,
Sanjay Juvekar
7
,
Siân Williams
11
;
RESPIRE Collaboration
Affiliations
1
NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Respiratory Health (RESPIRE), Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
2
Neoventive Solutions, Islamabad, Pakistan.
3
icddr,b, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
4
Bangladesh Primary Care Respiratory Society, Khulna, Bangladesh.
5
Projahnmo Research Foundation, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
6
Rural Unit for Health and Social Affairs, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India.
7
Vadu Rural Health Program, KEM Hospital Research Centre, Pune, India.
8
Department of Primary Care, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
9
The Allergy and Asthma Institute, Islamabad, Pakistan.
10
Child Health Research Foundation, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
11
International Primary Care Respiratory Group.
PMID:
36056799
PMCID:
PMC9440618
DOI:
10.7189/jogh.12.03057
No abstract available
Publication types
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
MeSH terms
Bangladesh / epidemiology
COVID-19*
Humans
India
Malaysia / epidemiology
Pakistan / epidemiology
Pandemics
Stakeholder Participation*