Exploring the importance of evidence in local health and wellbeing strategies.

J Public Health (Oxf)

Evidence for Policy and Practice Information and Coordinating Centre, UCL Institute of Education, University College London, 20 Bedford Way, London WC1H 0AL, UK.

Published: March 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how research evidence is utilized in public health decision-making and its importance for supporting informed choices by decision-makers.
  • The analysis focuses on Health and Wellbeing Strategies as sources of evidence, revealing that local areas often initiate their own research to address specific questions, though the quality of these studies is uncertain.
  • The findings suggest a consistent underutilization of qualitative research and academic evidence, especially in complex areas with significant needs, indicating that targeted knowledge brokerage could be beneficial.

Article Abstract

As evidence generators, we need to respond to the changes in the health delivery landscape if we are to continue to support public health decision-makers to make informed and judicious evidence-based choices. This study employs documentary analysis to (i) explore the extent of research evidence use in public health decision-making; (ii) to analyse occurrences of research evidence use in decision-making and (iii) to ascertain whether patterns of evidence use overlap with other area characteristics. Health and Wellbeing Strategies constitute the main source of documentary evidence. Initial results highlight that local areas are undertaking their own programmes of research that are used to inform specific questions, although the methodological robustness of these studies is unknown. There are also commonalities with previous findings, particularly with regard to the underutilization of qualitative research evidence and evidence on the effectiveness of interventions. Using Qualitative Comparative Analysis, this paper also highlights that underutilization of more academic research evidence appears disproportionally weighted towards areas with some of the most complex needs but that are not receiving the highest level of spending to meet these challenges. These areas in particular may be those where knowledge brokerage activities may have the greatest impacts.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pubmed/fdx152DOI Listing

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