
Building a Centre of Excellence for Research and Training for DR-TB in Daru, Papua New Guinea
Burnet Institute, as part of a consortium of institutions led by Menzies School of Health Research, was awarded funding via DFAT for a project that aims to strengthen operational research capacity for tuberculosis (TB) in Papua New Guinea through structured training, mentorship and jointly conducting research that meets program and health needs.
Objective
The goal was to establish Daru as a regional Centre of Excellence for research and training in drug-resistant TB (DR-TB). In so doing, the project would build the capacity of a range of PNG institutions, including Provincial Health Offices, the National Department of Health, PNG Institute of Medical Research, and the University of Papua New Guinea.
The project’s three objectives were to:
- develop a Western Province TB program operational research agenda that enables a more effective response to TB and strengthens the health system
- conduct structured operational research training for staff from key PNG health and research institutions
- strengthen the capacity of the Western Province TB program to measure the impact of programmatic interventions for TB and evaluate the pilot model of care, to enable scale-up.
To achieve these objectives, the project’s components included a two-day research priority-setting workshop for TB in Daru, which involved participants from key PNG health and research institutions.
This would embed ownership of the research agenda within the relevant PNG stakeholders.
We also conducted structured operational research training, which included methodology used by the WHO and Burnet Institute in the PNG National Health and HIV Research Agenda (funded by DFAT). he methodology was based on the successful Union/MSF/TDR SORT-IT model of operational research capacity building.
Twelve PNG participants from key institutions received hands-on mentorship to conduct their own operational research project, as part of a three-week course conducted in two modules over 18 months.
Timeline
2017–2018.
Approach
The SORT-IT project complements the DFAT-funded Reducing the Impact of Drug-Resistant TB (RID-TB) project and the PNG Department of Health’s South Fly District Accelerated Response Plan, which include designing and conducting research to test interventions and innovations that will increase the efficiency and impact of the TB response in Western Province.
The pilot of a state-of-the-art data system for TB (including electronic medical records and mobile health innovations) in Daru, enabling improved data quality and real-time reporting. Ultimately ensuring quality operational research through robust data systems and trained human resources.
Partners
Funding partners
- Tropical Disease Research Regional Collaboration Initiative (TDRRCI)
- Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT)
Collaborators
This project is a consortium led by Menzies School of Health Research, Darwin, Australia, in collaboration with the Burnet Institute, PNG Department of Health, PNG Institute of Medical Research, and organisations in Indonesia and Malaysia.
Project contacts
Project team

Associate Professor Suman Majumdar
Chief Health Officer - COVID & Health Emergencies; Deputy Program Director, Health Security and Pandemic Preparedness; Principal Research Fellow

Geoffrey Chan
Health Systems and Strategic Information Specialist

Professor Steve Graham
Honorary Staff

Alexa Murray
Senior Research Officer & Project Manager
