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Science Communication: Influencing policymakers

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Scientists failing to communicate

Source: Daily Nation

27 January 2009 | EN

African scientist at lab bench

Kenyan scientists need to better communicate their findings

IRD

Scientists need to communicate better to improve the uptake of advancing technology, says Joseph Othieno, communications manager of the Kenya Veterinary Association.

Most Kenyan scientists, he says, are cocooned in laboratories — churning out findings but neglecting to pass them on to consumers. Kenyan farmers adapting to climate change do so based on authority rulings or circumstance, rather than informed decision-making.

Weak information is the greatest danger, says Othieno — a well-informed public can translate into a strong democracy and a sustainable economy.

Scientists must recognise that their poor communication skills are a problem and should make use of the mass media to inform the public about their discoveries.

Institutions should measure success by counting the number of people who are successfully using research findings, rather than the number of citations such findings have received. Science's value lies in its rate of transfer to the end-user.

Link to full article in Daily Nation

Comments

Carol Hunja ( United Kingdom )

3 February 2009

I would like to agree with Dr. Otieno's sentiments that most scientists fail to communicate their findings locally because they are trying to compete with the rest of the world in citing their results in peer-reviewed journals. This is a shame since as Africans we should be more aware of the burden disease and poverty confer hence the motivation to alleviate it. However most scientists will even hide their results so that nobody else can 'copy' their research and hence publish before they do. We need to have our priorities set right so that the outcome of the science we engage in can be seen and felt in the masses.

Bharat Babu Shrestha ( Tribhuvan University | Nepal )

18 February 2009

In addition to publishing research findings in peer reviewed journals with high impact factors, researchers should have time and skill to write the major output of the research in local language understandable to the community. Media should also give appropriate place in their coverage for such writings. This is generally not happening in Nepal too.

Oliver Kanene ( Malaria Research and Control Communication Partnership | Zambia )

7 May 2009

Research results must reach the policy makers, the poor and marginalised for whom it is meant. However, scientists need to be assisted in and regularly reminded to communicate their work. In Zambia there are plans to institutionalize research communication through regular "short courses" for scientists, the media and others; and to conduct activities which sustain research communication through non-academic channels. Research funders should, apart from including budget lines for communication in research budgets, support such efforts. DFID, for instance, requires that a "good" percentage of its research budget goes towards communication. More should emulate this. In Zambia we need to know that half our soils are becoming useless, why, and what we can do to reclaim them and avoid further damage. Thanks Dr. Otieno, Carol and Bharat.

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