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Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique logoLink to Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
. 2009 Jan 1;100(1):I27–I30. doi: 10.1007/BF03405506

The Imperative of Strategic Alignment Across Organizations: The Experience of the Canadian Cancer Society’s Centre for Behavioural Research and Program Evaluation

Roy Cameron 1,, Barbara L Riley 1, H Sharon Campbell 1, Stephen Manske 1, Kim Lamers-Bellio 1
PMCID: PMC6973817  PMID: 19263980

Abstract

The Canadian Cancer Society’s Centre for Behavioural Research and Program Evaluation (CBRPE) is a national asset for building pan-Canadian capacity to support intervention studies that guide population-level policies and programs. This paper briefly describes CBRPE’s experience in advancing this work in the field of prevention. The aim is to illuminate issues of central importance for advancing the goals of the Population Health Intervention Research Initiative for Canada. According to our experience, success in building the population intervention field will depend heavily on purposeful alignment across organizations to enable integration of research, evaluation, surveillance, policy and practice. CBRPE’s capacity development roles include a) a catalytic role in shaping this aligned inter-organizational milieu and b) investing our resources in building tangible assets (teams, indicators, data systems) that contribute relevant capacities within this emerging milieu. Challenges in building capacity in this field are described.

Key words: Population health; intervention studies, capacity building, organizational alignment

Footnotes

Preparation of this paper was supported by a personnel award to Dr. Riley from the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

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