@article{22297, author = {Yan L. and Malaga G. and Perel P. and Checkley W. and Miranda J. and Rabadan-Diehl C. and Smeeth L. and Cardenas M. and Diez-Canseco F. and Gilman R. and Carrillo-Larco R. and Bernabe-Ortiz A. and Lazo-Porras M. and Moscoso-Porras M. and Pesantes M. and Ponce V. and Araya R. and Beran D. and Busse P. and Boggio O. and Garcia P. and Huicho L. and Leon-Velarde F. and Lescano A. and Mohr D. and Pan W. and Rivera-Chira M. and Sacksteder K. and Trujillo A. and Wells J. and Garcia H. and Peiris David}, title = {Towards sustainable partnerships in global health: the case of the CRONICAS Centre of Excellence in Chronic Diseases in Peru}, abstract = {

Human capital requires opportunities to develop and capacity to overcome challenges, together with an enabling environment that fosters critical and disruptive innovation. Exploring such features is necessary to establish the foundation of solid long-term partnerships. In this paper we describe the experience of the CRONICAS Centre of Excellence in Chronic Diseases, based at Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia in Lima, Peru, as a case study for fostering meaningful and sustainable partnerships for international collaborative research. The CRONICAS Centre of Excellence in Chronic Diseases was established in 2009 with the following Mission: "We support the development of young researchers and collaboration with national and international institutions. Our motivation is to improve population's health through high quality research." The Centre's identity is embedded in its core values - generosity, innovation, integrity, and quality- and its trajectory is a result of various interactions between multiple individuals, collaborators, teams, and institutions, which together with the challenges confronted, enables us to make an objective assessment of the partnership we would like to pursue, nurture and support. We do not intend to provide a single example of a successful partnership, but in contrast, to highlight what can be translated into opportunities to be faced by research groups based in low- and middle-income countries, and how these encounters can provide a strong platform for fruitful and sustainable partnerships. In defiant contexts, partnerships require to be nurtured and sustained. Acknowledging that all partnerships are not and should not be the same, we also need to learn from the evolution of such relationships, its key successes, hurdles and failures to contribute to the promotion of a culture of global solidarity where mutual goals, mutual gains, as well as mutual responsibilities are the norm. In so doing, we will all contribute to instil a new culture where expectations, roles and interactions among individuals and their teams are horizontal, the true nature of partnerships.

}, year = {2016}, journal = {Global Health}, volume = {12}, edition = {2016/06/04}, number = {1}, pages = {29}, isbn = {1744-8603 (Electronic)
1744-8603 (Linking)}, note = {Miranda, J Jaime
Bernabe-Ortiz, Antonio
Diez-Canseco, Francisco
Malaga, German
Cardenas, Maria K
Carrillo-Larco, Rodrigo M
Lazo-Porras, Maria
Moscoso-Porras, Miguel
Pesantes, M Amalia
Ponce, Vilarmina
Araya, Ricardo
Beran, David
Busse, Peter
Boggio, Oscar
Checkley, William
Garcia, Patricia J
Huicho, Luis
Leon-Velarde, Fabiola
Lescano, Andres G
Mohr, David C
Pan, William
Peiris, David
Perel, Pablo
Rabadan-Diehl, Cristina
Rivera-Chira, Maria
Sacksteder, Katherine
Smeeth, Liam
Trujillo, Antonio J
Wells, Jonathan C K
Yan, Lijing L
Garcia, Hector H
Gilman, Robert H
Review
England
Global Health. 2016 Jun 2;12(1):29. doi: 10.1186/s12992-016-0170-z.}, language = {eng}, }