10.1.1  Guidelines for health research

The essential guidelines for every health research study (including your community survey) are listed below.

  • Research should focus on priority health problems in the community, and there should be a clear statement of the problems.
  • A research study needs clear objectives and a plan; it should not be aimlessly looking for something in the hope that you will come across a solution.
  • The research plan should be action-oriented, i.e. aimed at discovering solutions for a priority health problem.
  • It should be participatory in nature, involving all stakeholders (see Section 10.1.2).
  • Simple, short-term research designs that are likely to yield practical results quickly should be used wherever possible.
  • The planned research should be cost-effective, i.e. affordable within available budgets and offering good ‘value for money’ in terms of its likely outcomes.
  • The researcher(s) should have appropriate expertise in the data collection methods and study design; the work should be carried out systematically and with patience, and should not be hurried.
  • The results should be based on observable evidence; observations, descriptions and results should be carefully recorded and accurately reported without any bias.
  • The research should be scheduled in such a way that results will be available in time to take the necessary actions recommended by the research findings.
  • Results should be presented in formats that are most useful for administrators, decision makers and community members to understand (see Study Session 13).
  • The research should be reproducible, so that the same result could be obtained by different investigators if they used the same methods.

10.1  What is health research?

10.1.2  Stakeholder participation in health research