“…Understanding the actual context in terms of political environment will enable actual use of evidence (70,76,77,100,137) , encourage institutional budgetary allocations for research (73,78) , health research and policy priority setting (70,76,79) , and support scale up for societal bene t (71, 72, 74-76, 80, 85, 96-101, 104) . Conversely, lack of credible context-speci c health evidence (75,86,102,103) , weak local evidence, misunderstanding of decision-makers, lack of consideration of sociocultural or religious practices (52,63,(105)(106)(107)(108)(109) , and weak involvement of advocacy coalitions, and evidence generators (110) have limited the translation of evidence into policy and practice. Additionally, policy translation needs mutual trust (41,84,111) .…”