The Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) is working towards building a healthier India. It is helping to address the limited institutional and systems capacity in India by strengthening education and training, advancing research and technology and facilitating policy and practice in the area of Public Health. PHFI is headquartered in New Delhi with national presence through its constituent units of regional Indian Institutes of Public Health (IIPHs) and Centers of Applied Research in core public health themes. The Foundation, established in 2006 as a public private initiative, is governed by an independent board comprising of senior government officials, eminent Indian and International academic and leaders, civil society representatives and corporate leaders. For more information, please visit the website www.phfi.org.Project Brief:Oral diseases are very common conditions affecting over 3.5 billion people globally. Oral conditions have a major impact causing pain, infection, and reduced quality of life, time off school or work, and social isolation. In many developing countries, oral diseases are becoming much more common. Despite their prevalence and impact, oral diseases have been woefully neglected within global health research.Oral diseases disproportionally affect poorer and marginalized groups, being very closely linked to levels of education and income. Oral conditions share common risks with other chronic diseases including sugar consumption, poor hygiene, tobacco use and harmful alcohol consumption, and the broader underlying social determinants (the conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age). In many countries, dental services are often inaccessible and unaffordable to large segments of the population but particularly disadvantaged groups.Our programme has following broad aims: Aim 1: Develop meaningful communication, dialogue and partnership with local communities to better understand their experiences of oral diseases and the best ways ahead of promoting sustainable community engagement in oral health research. Aim 2: Investigate the pattern and impact of oral health inequalities. Aim 3: Identify opportunities to reform dental care systems to improve their integration with the broader health system and their accessibility and affordability. Aim 4: Build research capacity in the evaluation of public health interventions and health system reforms through postgraduate training and short courses. Aim 5: Engage key stakeholders and partners on the importance of oral diseases and the need for policy and system reform.This programme will use different research methods to collect and analyses various types of data. Existing national oral health survey data from each country will be analyses to assess oral health inequalities. Individual semi-structured interviews will be undertaken with people from disadvantaged backgrounds to explore their views of the impact of oral diseases on their lives.Community engagement activities in this programme will take place to ensure that local communities, and in particular disadvantaged groups are fully consulted and given an opportunity to express their views and co-produce all aspects of the research programme from planning to dissemination of results. The results from our programme of research will be shared and disseminated across policy, professional, and community networks in each of the participating countries but also more widely across existing international networks.The anticipated impact of this programme includes raising understanding and awareness of the public health importance of oral diseases and inequalities, developing the evidence base for population interventions and system reforms, and ultimately developing public health policies to promote better oral health.Deliverables:
MNCJobsIndia.com will not be responsible for any payment made to a third-party. All Terms of Use are applicable.