Les accidents de la route à Ouagadougou, un révélateur de la gestion urbaine

Cet article d’Aude Nikiema, Emmanuel Bonnet, Salifou Sidbega et Valéry Ridde a été publié dans le numéro 78 de la revue Lien social et Politiques. Ce numéro, intitulé Santé et politiques urbaines, est paru en 2017 sous la direction de Carole Clavier et Renaud Crespin. L’article, en accès libre ci-dessous, aborde les relations entre les politiques urbaines de développement du réseau routier et les accidents de la route.  (suite…)

Application et défis de l’utilisation de méthodes mixtes dans la recherche sur les systèmes de santé (en anglais).

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Last Wednesday, November 16, Valéry Ridde and her colleagues Manuela De Allegri, Quan Nha Hong, Anne-Marie Turcotte-Tremblay and Nicolas Ortiz Ruis organized a session on mixed methods at HSR 2016 (Fourth Global Symposium on Health Systems Research), which took place in Vancouver throughout the whole week. The session, entitled “Application and challenges to the use of mixed methods in health systems research” was presented under the theme “Future learning and evaluation approaches for health system development”.

Through a mix of presentations and active group participatory approaches, this session aimed at identifying experiences, challenges, and solutions related to the application of mixed methods protocols in health systems research across a variety of settings in high, low and middle income countries.

With more than 60 participants, this session was a success, and the presentations made during this session are presented below, at the request of the participants.

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For references, you can refer to our wikitools here, (or here in its french version) as well as the ARPH paper: Pierre Pluye & Quan Nha Hong (2014). Combining the power of stories and the power of numbers: Mixed Methods Research and Mixed Studies Reviews. Annual Review of Public Health, 35:29-45. A webinar on mixed-methods published online by the International Institute for Qualitative Methodology is also available here.

It can be downloaded free of charge here. Please note that this URL is for your own personal use: “Any further/multiple distribution, publication, or commercial usage of this copyrighted material requires submission of a permission request addressed to the Copyright Clearance Center“.  The review was submitted to Systematic Reviews (open access journal) but is not published yet.

 

 

 

 

 

La santé mondiale: recherche et enseignement au Québec.

Ce livre, publié sous la direction de Valéry Ridde et Katia S. Mohindra, est le 110ème numéro de la collection des Cahiers Scientifiques de l’Acfas et rassemble les actes du colloque: “Développer et pratiquer la recherche et l’enseignement en santé mondiale” au Québec, présenté dans le cadre du 75e Congrès de l’Acfas, le 11 mai 2007, à l’Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières. Le livre est en libre accès et téléchargeable en pdf en cliquant sur l’image ci-dessous ou le lien présenté plus bas. (suite…)

Dennis Pérez Chacón

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dennis-perez-chaconDennis Pérez Chacón, M. Sc., Ph.D.

Sociologist. Postdoctoral researcher at the Institute Public Health Research Institute of the University of Montreal (IRSPUM), within the chair REALISME.

E-mail:

 

Dennis Pérez is a sociologist (Havana University, 1997); with postgraduate training on popular education, participatory action research, disease control (Master degree, ITM, 2004) and social development (Master degree, Havana University, 2007), among others. She holds a PhD in Sociology (Havana University, 2011) and in Health Sciences (Gent University, 2015).

Since 1997 she has worked as researcher at the Epidemiology Division of Pedro Kourí Institute of Tropical Medicine (IPK), Havana, Cuba. She has been working for nearly 10 years on building evidence on empowerment strategies for dengue prevention and control in the Cuban context. Her main focus has been the dynamics of empowerment processes at small scale and the factors that could influence these processes when moving from micro to macro implementation. Based on her empirical, mainly qualitative, research and on her sociological background, and together with her colleagues, she has brought theoretical developments on the concept of participation and on some implementation issues.

Her areas of interest are community participation in disease control; acceptability, implementation fidelity and diffusion of complex health innovations.

Contacts:

Linda François, coordonnatrice

+1 – 514­ – 995 – 2403

Pavillon 7101 Avenue Du Parc
Local 3079
C.P.6128, succ. Centre-ville
Montréal, (Québec) H3C 3J7
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