Prof Akin Abayomi, (left), keynote speaker and Prof MC. Asuzu at the conference

 

By Morenike Folayan

At the just concluded 5th Nigeria Global Health Trials Conference which held on the 30th and 31st of January 2018 at the Sickle Cell Foundation Centre, Idi-Araba Lagos, Dr Pelumi Adebiyi  challenged the over 250 participants present at the meeting to encourage social disruption of the research enterprise in Nigeria.

 

Just like many speakers who had made presentations before him, he challenged participants – many of whom were young researchers from multiple fields of practice – to promote inter-disciplinary collaborative research to redress health issues. This implies embracing diversity.

 

Questioning the question often results in the disruption of norms. It results in conduct of research that addresses specific needs. It moves people from convention to identifying more efficient and productive ways of getting things done. There will be shake ups, challenges, innovation and change.

 

 

For Dr Adebiyi, researchers in Nigeria will have to do things differently!

 

 

One of such new ways of doing things is moving from siloed research practices to research practices that embrace international collaborations (North- South; and South-South), multi-disciplinary collaborations, multi-site collaborations and academic-corporate collaboration.

 

 

Meanwhile, this same change had earlier being iterated by other speakers at the session.

Prof Folasade Ogunsola, one of the three Deputy Vice Chancellors of the University of Lagos, while speaking on North-South research collaboration, explained to participants how researchers can ensure such collaboration will be beneficial for the local community and country even when the agenda is driven by the North that brings the funding.

 

It is a process of growth in a relationship often initiated by the Northern partner, but it is one that can grow to a level of equity if the Southern partner builds his or her competency within the collaboration. The country benefits at the end of the day.

 

Similarly, Prof Babatunde Salako reiterated that collaboration should include partners outside the health sector. Health is impacted negatively by food insecurity, trade in health damaging products (tobacco, arms, toxic waste), poor governance, and wars and conflicts. A global health approach to the conduct of research implies conducting research that takes cognizance of the impact of these social, economic, cultural, behavioural, structural and biological determinants of health in appraising health and well being.

 

The 6th edition of the conference is planned to hold in January 2019 at Ibadan. Participants are looking forward to learning a lot more about the ‘how’ of causing social disruption in research. This conference seems to have focused on the ‘why’.

 

The conference was supported by the New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society, the Global Health Network at Oxford University, UK, and POSTERITY MEDIA.

 

 

Folayan is of the New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society, Nigeria