Experts Call for the Adoption of Health Interventions to Enhance Patient Outcomes

Senior health experts and researchers have urged the integration of implementation research to ensure sustainable access to health interventions across Nigeria.
They highlighted that embedding implementation research into health policies and programmes can help determine what works, for whom, and under what circumstances. Such insights, the experts said, would strengthen health systems, improve outcomes, and ensure that limited resources yield lasting benefits for the population.
The call was made during the Project Dissemination and South-South Collaboration Workshop of the SAVING Consortium, recently held in Abuja and organised by the Academy for Health Development (AHEAD), Nigeria.
Prof. Margaret Gyapong, Principal Investigator and Chair of the SAVING Consortium, emphasised the value of implementation research. She explained, “In practice, when effective disease control tools, strategies, or policies are scaled across entire systems, their health impact often falls short of expectations. Implementation research can help identify and overcome the bottlenecks and barriers responsible.”
She added, “Implementation research enhances programme effectiveness within specific contexts, optimises resources, and promotes equity across diverse populations.”
In a joint presentation titled “Overview of Implementation Research,” Professors Olumide Ogundahunsi and Tuoyo Okorosobo of the SAVING Consortium described it as “a systematic approach to understanding and addressing barriers to the effective and quality implementation of health interventions, strategies, and policies.” They noted that implementation research is demand-driven and conducted under real-life conditions.
Prof. Evelyn Ansah, a Professor of Clinical Epidemiology and Public Health, highlighted the importance of building capacity in implementation research, stressing that training should be encouraged and institutionalised as a regular exercise.
Prof. Adesegun Fatusi, President of AHEAD, noted that the next implementation research training workshop, scheduled for the first quarter of 2026, would offer a platform for interdisciplinary dialogue and the sharing of implementation challenges. He stressed that tailoring interventions to local cultural and health system contexts is crucial for success in health intervention delivery.
Fatusi also emphasised the need for collaboration among stakeholders to maximise the impact of implementation research, ensuring that solutions are contextually relevant and sustainable. He concluded that integrating implementation research is essential for achieving efficient, equitable, and sustainable health outcomes.





