key: cord-0995890-dz0i1rzu authors: Nakanjako, Damalie; Zalwango, Flavia; Wairagala, Pamela; Luboga, Fiona; Andia Biraro, Irene; Bukirwa, Victoria Diana; Mboowa, Mary Gorrethy; Cose, Steve; Seeley, Janet; Elliott, Alison title: Career development for infection and immunity research in Uganda: a decade of experience from the Makerere University – Uganda Virus Research Institute research and training programme date: 2020-06-24 journal: AAS Open Res DOI: 10.12688/aasopenres.13066.1 sha: 16eb916e38314f8180c9bd6ca6d9e98ecb283695 doc_id: 995890 cord_uid: dz0i1rzu Background: The Makerere University/Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI) Centre of Excellence for Infection & Immunity Research and Training (MUII) is a collaborative programme supporting excellence in Infection and Immunity (I&I) research in Uganda. Set up in 2008, MUII aims to produce internationally competitive Ugandan and East African I&I research leaders, and develop human and infrastructural resources to support research and training excellence. We undertook an internal evaluation of MUII’s achievements, challenges and lessons learned between August 2008 and December 2019, to inform programmes seeking to build Africa’s health research expertise. Methods: Quantitative data were abstracted from programme annual reports. Qualitative data were obtained in March and April 2019: a cross-sectional evaluation was undertaken among a purposefully selected representative sample of 27 trainees and two programme staff. Qualitative data was analysed according to pre-determined themes of achievements, challenges, lessons learned and recommendations for improvement. Results: By December 2019, MUII had supported 68 fellowships at master’s-level and above (50% female: 23 Masters, 27 PhD, 15 post-doctoral, three group-leader fellows) and over 1,000 internships. Fellows reported career advancement, mentorship by experts, and improved research skills and outputs. Fellows have published over 300 papers, secured grants worth over £20m, established over 40 international collaborations, and taken on research and academic leadership positions in the country. Key lessons for success include the following: efficient administration provides an enabling environment; institutions need supportive policies for procurement, including provisions for purchases of specific biological research reagents from international manufacturers; strong international, multi-disciplinary collaboration provides a critical mass of expertise to mentor researchers in development; and mentorship catalyses young scientists to progress from graduate trainees to productive academic researchers, relevant to society’s most pressing health challenges. Conclusions: Sustainable academic productivity can be achieved through efficient operational support, global collaboration and mentorship to provide solutions to Africa’s health challenges. From its inception in 2008 as a training programme, and transition in 2016 to a Centre of Excellence, the Makerere University/Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI) Centre of Excellence for Infection & Immunity Research and Training (MUII) has earned a reputation for building Ugandan capacity in infection and immunity (I&I) research. MUII, a partnership between Uganda's leading health research institute (UVRI) and the country's oldest and most prestigious university (Makerere University), collaborates with University of Cambridge, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and other partners, and is currently funded through the African Academy of Sciences' DELTAS Africa Initiative 1, 2 . MUII aims to provide opportunities to bright young Ugandans to engage in Africa-led world-class research in I&I to provide solutions for Africa's health challenges, and to contribute to improving global health. The current COVID-19 global crisis underscores the need for local expertise and infrastructure to support national responses to global health challenges within the local context. MUII supports graduate training (master's and doctoral students) and early career scientists (post-doctoral and group leaders) in I&I disciplines. In addition, MUII provides placements for undergraduate and new-graduate interns, including proactive support for individuals with disability, to develop interest and participate in biomedical research. Unlike recent large-capacity building programmes that have focused on increasing the numbers and quality of medical graduates to support health care in resource-limited settings 3,4 , MUII supports development of local research scientists to harness cutting edge tools of immunology, molecular biology, genetics and bioinformatics to address the health challenges of tropical Africa 1,2 . Although PhD training has increased in the last decade through various collaborative programmes 5 , there is limited experience and data on growth of academic careers from PhD graduates to independent scientists and leaders in science, policy and practice. This gap is emphasised by the scarcity of post-doctoral and research fellow positions in the establishment of several academic institutions in Uganda and the sub-Saharan region. We therefore found it necessary to systematically investigate and document the drivers of the success, the challenges and the key lessons from MUII that might be useful to other research capacity building programmes in Uganda and similar resource-limited settings, to further bridge the gap between doctoral degrees and academic research leadership, building public utility of local scientists to lead, inform and solve local problems within the global context. Programme description MUII supports a centre of excellence in I&I research and training, with a secretariat based at UVRI. The secretariat comprises the Director, Centre Manager, finance, administration, procurement, monitoring and evaluation, and communication teams which work in close collaboration with UVRI government staff. In addition, MUII has employed scientific staff in areas requiring intensive support and development (initially a senior, expatriate immunologist; subsequently a more junior Ugandan immunologist (recently graduated from an American university); both at first full-time, later part-time. These supported initiation of core training in immunology, and subsequently contributed to development of Makerere's master's degree in immunology and clinical microbiology, and the development of a new department of Immunology and Molecular Biology, chaired by a MUII post-doctoral alumnus. Similarly, MUII has supported a lead scientist in bioinformatics, first as a post-doctoral fellow, subsequently as a part-time staff scientist. MUII functions through core implementation teams called Impis (from the Zulu word for a band of warriors) which provide support for the fellows' projects. The Impis include Immunology, Bioinformatics, Fellowships, Mentorship, Monitoring and Evaluation, Internships and Diversity, as well as Community Engagement 1,2 . In addition to fellowships, MUII provides opportunities for endeavour awards to allow innovative interventions and visiting scientists awards to allow fellows to invite or visit international experts in specific fields of interest to build research expertise. An executive committee chaired by the Director, with representation from each category of trainees (master's, PhD and post-doctoral) and from each Impi, manages the implementation of the programme, with oversight from a steering committee. The programme has a Scientific Advisory Board (SAB) consisting of local and international experts in I&I who help to review all programme activities. A SAB member usually chairs fellowship selection committees; and SAB members attend the Annual General Meeting, participating in review of fellows' progress, programme goals, activities, outputs and outcomes ( Figure 1 ). We reviewed programme monitoring and evaluation data, including annual reports (2008-2019), for quantitative data on number of trainees and outputs including publications and research grants. Additionally, in a cross-sectional study, qualitative evaluation was conducted in March and April 2019 by F.Z., a social scientist at the medical research council (with MSc in Gerontology) independent of the MUII programme. A representative sample of 27 trainees (out of 50 then available), and two centre staff was purposefully selected. The purposive representative sample considered representation of five categories of fellows: Masters, PhD, post-doctoral and group-leader fellows, and honorary fellows (not directly funded by MUII, but registered under MUII, participating in fellows' meetings and training activities, and sometimes receiving small travel or equipment grants). The interviewer introduced herself to all interviewees on email, highlighted the purpose of the interview and made suitable appointments. All participants contacted accepted to participate in face-to-face interviews during working hours. The interview was attended by the interviewer, interviewee and two media staff to audio and video record. Skype interviews were conducted with participants unavailable for face-to-face interaction. Each interview lasted at least 45 minutes. In-depth interviews (IDI) were conducted with the fellows and key informant interviews (KII) with staff, by using a pre-tested topic guide (see Extended data) to explore experiences from the MUII programme over the last 10 years. The guide was designed to obtain insights into best practices, challenges, impact, and sustainability of the impact beyond the programme, and included questions on new leadership roles and mentorship experience that fellows have been involved in after participating in the MUII programme. Qualitative data management and analysis Qualitative interviews and Skype calls were audio-recorded and later transcribed verbatim. These data were underpinned on content analysis, coded by F.Z., and analysed thematically using a framework that was informed by the study objectives and preliminary findings, according to pre-determined themes of achievements, challenges, lessons learned and recommendations for improvement. The framework was for coding the study data with constant comparison across the team to ensure consistency. The coding of data was managed using NVivo 12. The protocol for the qualitative evaluation was reviewed by the Research Ethics Committee of the Uganda Virus Research Institute, which gave a waiver of written consent and approval to publish these routine program data (REF GC/127/19/03/699). Participants gave verbal consent to participation in the interviews and the use of the material from the interviews, including quotes, in this paper. Permission was sought from participants whose quotations appear in the paper. Achievements MUII's principal achievements comprise a) the successes and career progression of trainees, b) growth in Infection and Immunity (I&I) research and training capacity at MUII partner institutions in Uganda, and c) establishment of sustainable international collaborations for young Ugandan scientists. Advice on MUII 3 programme strategy 1. The SAB participation in planning for MUII3 through 2019 and 2020 AGM and SAB meetings. Additional input from policy-makers and other potential "end-users" of research has been initiated, and will continue during the planning and execution of MUII 3 2. The SAB review reports and progress at each future MUII 3 AGM and guiding further direction Between January 2008 and December 2019, MUII supported 68 fellowships including 23 master's fellows, 27 PhD fellows, 15 post-doctoral fellows and three group leaders in I&I research. Of these, 53 were directly funded by MUII, while 15 were honorary fellows (Table 1) . By December 2019 these fellows, since joining MUII, had published over 300 peer-reviewed publications and received over 20 million Pound Sterling worth of additional funds for research ( Figure 2 ). These were all desired outputs of the programme demonstrating the achievement of the goal, "...to allow the Fellows to develop into independently funded research leaders" (EMEL028, M, KII, Centre Staff). Other members of staff commented that seeing alumni 'take off' and become independent was a clear mark of success. Many MUII alumni have taken on academic leadership roles as Principal Investigators, Heads of Departments, Deans of Schools, supervisors of graduate students, and mentors of other emerging scientists. MUII also supported over 1000 internships at UVRI and exposed over 5000 high school students to scientific research through "Open Days" at UVRI. Before MUII was launched, there were few facilities for immunology research at Makerere University. Starting with a small immunology laboratory under the Department of Microbiology, MUII contributed to human, technical and physical infrastructural development in I&I capacity. This is evidenced by new Masters' and doctoral training programmes in Immunology and Clinical Microbiology and in Genomics and Bioinformatics (with increasing numbers of applicants), that have been developed with MUII alumni as heads of departments, supervisors and investigators in multi-disciplinary Infection and Immunity research (Table 2) . However, interviewees reported several important challenges encountered. Procurement. Delay in procurement of biological research supplies was reported as a critical challenge. Most government procurement systems did not have provision for direct orders from international suppliers of reagents specifically used in published immunology protocols, without the bureaucracy of local agents. This was a bottleneck to timely implementation of research and many fellows relied on international laboratory placements to complete their work. One fellow commented: "I spent most of my time in the lab overseas to avoid delays because that is where I could get my supplies continuously delivered almost immediately from the manufacturing company." (EMEL004, F, IDI, Group Leader). Others mentioned the need to place orders directly with manufacturers to avoid local agents and procurement delays. Nevertheless, the procurement teams at UVRI and Makerere worked together to understand the issues affecting the researchers and did their best within the allowable clauses and limitations in policies for procurement of research reagents and equipment. A common challenge for fellows was to meet deadlines, and many mentioned that they had to balance research with their clinical and teaching responsibilities: "One still has to perform their roles as a clinician, teacher, researcher, Head of Department, wife, mother, etc." (EMEL001, F, IDI, post-doc). Time pressure increased as fellows advanced in their research career. Some fields had very limited local capacity for application of immunology and bioinformatics tools to address challenging threats: for example, the field of maternal health for the challenge of pre-eclampsia. MUII responded to this challenge through the support of international collaborators (Table 3) . Some of these collaborative efforts have resulted in lasting collaborations between fellows and supervisors, for example: "The collaboration with Cambridge started with a PhD student and her mentor but now lots of other people involved in the health arena from Cambridge are working with her department. That is the ideal way we would like to see collaborations grow." (EMEL029, F, KII, Centre Staff). Maintaining active research beyond their MUII funding was a challenge for fellows, with the prospect of attracting funding appearing quite daunting: "I need real significant funding which can maintain a group or team of six people for three years. I also need support in terms of someone commenting on the proposal or application and being connected to people of similar interests." (EMEL009, M, IDI, post-doc). However, many fellows appreciated that this challenge was to be expected and competitive resource mobilisation is part of being a research scientist. To address this challenge, MUII organised skills-building meetings for fellows including grant writing and peer-review to increase the competitiveness of applications. In addition, MUII supports a mentorship programme where fellows can be linked to experts in their field. Interviewees shared key lessons learned in capacity building for research in resource-limited settings. Programme administration and organisation. Good operational management was key to success of the training and research programme ( Figure 1 and Table 2 ). The distribution of roles to improve efficiency and the monitoring and evaluation functions helped the fellows to adhere to research regulations and programme timelines for master's and doctoral students. Many of the fellows were grateful for the support they had received to enable them to graduate. Public academic and research institutions need to be supported to foster active framework agreements with international manufacturers of biological research reagents to minimise time delays created by looking for local agents who do not routinely import items that are specific to biological laboratory experiments and innovations. Supporting young researchers to progress through MSc, PhD and post-doc programmes and subsequently to develop as group leaders to mentor other upcoming scientists and maintain the pipeline has been greatly valued. The MUII capacity-building programme in I&I has demonstrated ten years of high quality training in emerging tools of immunology and bioinformatics to answer locally generated questions to address gaps in knowledge and practice in the dominating infections of HIV, tuberculosis, malaria and its complications, helminths and emerging viruses, as well as the rising burden of non-communicable diseases including asthma, diabetes, hypertension and pre-eclampsia 6-32 . Through the spectrum of fellowships provided, from the most junior of undergraduate interns to master's, doctoral, post-doctoral and groupleader awards, MUII has provided mentored research training opportunities to foster growth of academic research careers. With the engagement of scientific and non-scientific community, MUII scientists disseminated their science, its relevance in the local context and exposed it to over 5000 high school students (tomorrow's scientists). The impact has been demonstrated by the programme monitoring and evaluation indicators that include, among others, peer-reviewed publications, additional funding for research and capacity building obtained by trainees, emergence of multi-disciplinary research groups, increasing applicants to the new MUII-supported masters' and doctoral programmes in immunology and bioinformatics, and number of active local and international collaborations. Unlike capacity-building initiatives that have focused on increasing the number of medical graduates for health care 3,4 and doctoral training in various fields 5,33 , MUII has focused on developing experts in I&I -a major gap that slackens local biomedical responses to emerging infections in Africa. In addition, MUII has embraced the challenge of technology transfer of new immunology and bioinformatics techniques with the aim that MUII trainees will be empowered to lead novel initiatives like developing vaccine or therapeutic targets for emerging diseases. In a modest way, MUII tried to mimic what developing an academic research career would entail in highincome settings, where a developing research group requires fellowship schemes to kick-start scientists, PhD students and post-docs to be part of novel ideas and publications, technicians to support high-throughput equipment, dry laboratory scientists for genomic analyses and mathematical modelling 2 . We recommend monitoring of equipment booking schedules to use wet laboratory equipment for immunology and molecular biology assays, abstracts presented at relevant local and international meetings, meetings held by our scientists with community, policymakers and other relevant stakeholders to demonstrate productivity and utility of the scientists. These are all critical for the next level of development of science in Africa. Improved management strategies are needed to tackle the epidemiological change facing Africa due to urbanisation and changes in lifestyle like the emerging burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in Africa 2 . Appropriate diagnostics, treatment and vaccines are needed in the face of unprecedented emerging pandemics, such as the current COVID-19 crisis. Locally generated evidence is critical to local management of such global pandemics; with examples of fast-tracked clinical trial data emerging from China and USA 34,35 and the reliance of countries on their leading scientists 36 to inform national and global interventions. There is need for clinical trials within the local and cultural context of communities and health system. For example, it is not obvious that host responses to hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin as COVID-19 trial therapies in America would be similar to those in sub-Saharan Africa where both drugs have been used commonly for endemic malaria and atypical pneumonias, or that vaccines developed in high-income settings will be equally effective in Africa. The MUII experience is unprecedented because of the previous absence of local advanced training programmes (MSc and doctoral level) in immunology and bioinformatics to advance locally trained scientists in I&I research. Therefore, the lessons learned over the decade of implementation of the programme, presented here, are noteworthy to inform ongoing and future capacity building programmes on the African continent. MUII had a dedicated secretariat to support programme communications, tracking, and evaluation. In addition, MUII supported two immunologists to be part of the new department of Immunology and Molecular Biology that is chaired by a former MUII post-doc. Similar input was previously illustrated by an ongoing capacity building programme for cancer research that protected support staff time of approximately 0.25 to 0.5 full-time equivalents contributed to the success of the programme 37 . The MUII secretariat also organised regular meetings which made it easy for people to be accountable not only for their time but also to their set goals. MUII also offered training in research methods, data analysis, use of data analysis software packages, grant writing, report writing, presentation skills, among others. During the regular programme capacity building meetings, fellows would critique each other's work, which greatly improved the quality of proposals and presentations. Fellows also had opportunities to participate in different workshops and conferences. MUII fellows were prepared to become better mentors, and many of them acquired peer mentees, as previously noted that peer mentorship greatly supported in-country capacity building initiatives 37 . At the regular progress meetings fellows discussed bottlenecks in their progress such as delayed procurement of specific reagents and equipment that required direct importation from manufacturers abroad. Both MUII institutions (UVRI and Makerere) still need support to develop and implement efficient policies that reduce the turn-around time for research reagents and equipment orders, many of which are expensive sole supplier items because of previously optimised protocols and equipment 38 . MUII programme increased trainees' networking opportunities through the large pool of multi-disciplinary scientists and through several collaborations established as well as the visiting scientist awards where fellows also had opportunities to invite expert scientists to support training and research locally. MUII has demonstrated a decade of mentored academic productivity in I&I research. Its sustainability is evidenced by the continuing mentorship, research groups, training programmes, resource mobilisation and global collaborations that have emerged to contribute to solutions to Africa's health care problems. More skills and commitment remain necessary for trainees in developing countries to compete favourably for international research funding to build and sustain a critical mass of I&I scientists, to respond to current and emerging health problems. Underlying data Interview transcripts contain information that could be used to identify participants. Therefore, these data are not openly available. Readers or reviewers who wish to access the data should email Damalie Nakanjako Flavia Zalwango (dnakan-jako@gmail.com) or Flavia Zalwango (Flavia.Zalwango@ mrcuganda.org) to apply for access to the underlying data. Data access will be provided to researchers for the purposes of re-analysis. This file contains the interview guide used in the present study. Extended data are available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC-BY 4.0). Author contributions DN, FZ, PW, FL, VDB, MGM, SC, AE, contributed to the design and implementation of the MUII programme activities including the annual reports. FZ was the independent social scientist who collected data from MUII staff and trainees. DN and FZ drafted the manuscript. All authors reviewed and approved the manuscript for publication. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Botswana, Gaborone, Botswana I have read the manuscript thoroughly and the study has scientific basis and the document is well written. However, below are some of the improvements that can be made: The introduction is rather brief and some of the information presented under the discussion can be useful to inform the introduction. The methods: -The methods are well described. The authors should consider describing how consistency and trustworthiness of the data was ensured in this study. Such information is important in qualitative studies. -The authors have described (under qualitative data management) that data was analysed thematically. A table indicating the major themes and sub-themes generated and also the meaning of each would add value to the manuscript. Clear definitions of themes and subthemes would enhance understanding the description under results, the quotations as evidence on the themes. Results: -The characteristics of respondents will add value to the manuscript of a table on demographic characteristics of the respondents could be provided. Table 1 is all about the achievements rather than who provided the information. -It appears from the results that only two major themes have been discussed i.e. achievements and challenges. This section should be structured to reflect the major themes cited under methods. Introduce sub-heading e.g. Achievements, Good practices, lesson learnt, recommendations for improvements etc. Discussion: -The discussion is well written but paragraph 5 is probably best placed under methods. This paragraph discusses establishment of a secretariat, an operational overseeing structure, therefore not part of the results. -The discussion should provide some of the recommendations made by respondents. Graphs and tables: The tables available are well presented. Check figure 2(B) on the y-axis, the UK Sterling Pound is written in plural (Pounds). Typo/grammatical errors: Check under "Data availability", line 4, after the name "Nakanjako" there is Flavia Zalwango. Delete because it is repeated on the next line 5. Is the study design appropriate and is the work technically sound? A need to accelerate health research productivity in an African University: the case of Makerere University College of Health Sciences PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text Mentorship needs at academic institutions in resource-limited settings: a survey at Makerere University College of Health Sciences PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text Interview Guide MUII_ Staff_F1000AAS.pdf. figshare. Journal contribution. 2020 This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium The authors and entire MUII programme acknowledge all MUII staff and trainees for their enthusiastic involvement in the programme activities. MUII programme acknowledges all her partner institutions including UVRI (host), Infectious Diseases Institute, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, College of Natural Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources and Bio-Security, College of Computing and Information Science, University of Cambridge (especially the team at Cambridge Africa), London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (especially the Wellcome Bloomsbury Centre for Global Health). In addition, MUII acknowledges the invaluable contributions of many other local, regional and international partners. Special acknowledgement goes to the members of the MUII Steering Committee and Scientific Advisory Board for their invaluable support to the programme.Page 10 of 16 AAS Open Research 2020, 3:26 Last updated: 20 JUL 2020 Version 1 20 July 2020 Reviewer Report https://doi.org/10.21956/aasopenres.14161.r27508 © 2020 Mukhwana A. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original Attribution License work is properly cited. African Academy of Sciences (AAS), Nairobi, Kenya I have read the manuscript, it is well written. Having said that, below are some suggestions to improve the article;In the introduction the authors mention post-doctoral and group leaders as early-career scientists, it would be of benefit to explain the difference between these two categories.Methods: The authors mention a secretariat and an executive committee (both headed by the director) managing the implementation of the programme. Also mentioned is an efficient administration that provides an enabling environment.What is the enabling environment? What is the role of secretariat if the management of the programme is done by the executive committee? It would be helpful to understand the difference in the roles above and why? What are the successes, changes and key lessons learned from this arrangement? How the two (in b above) that separated from the UVRI administrative structure mentioned in 3. 1. 3. Research leadership and developing collaborations & networks are not categorized as scientific citizenship under DELTAS Africa.Results: the authors have described success and career progression of trainees.It would be informative to show the number of fellows that grew through the ranks (from masters through to early career). How long does it take to grow I&I scientists for public utility? Describe the support referred to under mentorship. Is the growth and success of the fellows in leadership roles totally attributed to MUII?Under sustainable training and research collaboration the authors mention fields in which world-class expertise was not available in Uganda -is there evidence for this? Was the expertise limited or totally not available? Are all the source data underlying the results available to ensure full reproducibility? Yes No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise: Research management and governance with over ten tens years managing capacity-building programmes at research institutions. 02 July 2020 Reviewer Report https://doi.org/10.21956/aasopenres.14161.r27510 Are all the source data underlying the results available to ensure full reproducibility? Yes No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise: A medical doctor, clinical respiratory physiologist who in the past ten years has engaged in global health initiatives specifically training health professionals (doctors, nurses, public health specialists) to become effective global health leaders.I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard.