8 results match your criteria: "Australia. abby.haynes@saxinstitute.org.au[Affiliation]"
Health Res Policy Syst
November 2018
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, The Sax Institute, Ultimo, NSW, 2007, Australia.
Background: Cross-sectoral, multidisciplinary partnership research is considered one of the most effective means of facilitating research-informed policy and practice, particularly for addressing complex problems such as chronic disease. Successful research partnerships tend to be underpinned by a range of features that enable knowledge mobilisation (KMb), seeking to connect academic researchers with decision-makers and practitioners to improve the nature, quality and use of research. This paper contributes to the growing discourse on partnership approaches by illustrating how knowledge mobilisation strategies are operationalised within the Australian Prevention Partnership Centre (the Centre), a national collaboration of academics, policy-makers and practitioners established to develop systems approaches for the prevention of lifestyle-related chronic diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Res Policy Syst
April 2018
Sax Institute, 235 Jones Street, Ultimo, NSW, 2007, Australia.
Background: Health policy-making can benefit from more effective use of research. In many policy settings there is scope to increase capacity for using research individually and organisationally, but little is known about what strategies work best in which circumstances. This review addresses the question: What causal mechanisms can best explain the observed outcomes of interventions that aim to increase policy-makers' capacity to use research in their work?
Methods: Articles were identified from three available reviews and two databases (PAIS and WoS; 1999-2016).
Health Res Policy Syst
November 2017
Centre for Medical Psychology & Evidence-based Decision-making, University of Sydney, The Lifehouse, 119-143 Missenden Rd, Camperdown, NSW, 2006, Australia.
Background: An intervention's success depends on how participants interact with it in local settings. Process evaluation examines these interactions, indicating why an intervention was or was not effective, and how it (and similar interventions) can be improved for better contextual fit. This is particularly important for innovative trials like Supporting Policy In health with Research: an Intervention Trial (SPIRIT), where causal mechanisms are poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImplement Sci
February 2016
Centre for Medical Psychology and Evidence-based Decision-making, Level 6, Chris O'Brien Lifehouse (C39Z), University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
Background: In this paper, we identify and respond to the fidelity assessment challenges posed by novel contextualised interventions (i.e. interventions that are informed by composite social and psychological theories and which incorporate standardised and flexible components in order to maximise effectiveness in complex settings).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Res Policy Syst
January 2016
School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Level 6, The Alfred Centre, 99 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC, 3004, Australia.
Background: Evidence-informed policymaking is more likely if organisations have cultures that promote research use and invest in resources that facilitate staff engagement with research. Measures of organisations' research use culture and capacity are needed to assess current capacity, identify opportunities for improvement, and examine the impact of capacity-building interventions. The aim of the current study was to develop a comprehensive system to measure and score organisations' capacity to engage with and use research in policymaking, which we entitled ORACLe (Organisational Research Access, Culture, and Leadership).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med
October 2015
The Sax Institute, Level 13 Building 10, 235 Jones Street, Ultimo, NSW, 2007, Australia.
Greenhalgh and Fahy's paper about the 2014 Research Excellence Framework provides insights into the challenges of assessing research impact. Future research assessment exercises should consider how best to include measurement of indirect and non-linear impact and whether efforts in knowledge transfer and co-production should be explicitly recognised. Greenhalgh and Fahy's findings also demonstrate that the structure of the assessment exercise can privilege certain kinds of research and may therefore miss some research that has a high impact on policy and practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImplement Sci
September 2014
Sax Institute, 235 Jones Street, Ultimo 2007, NSW, Australia.
Background: Process evaluation is vital for understanding how interventions function in different settings, including if and why they have different effects or do not work at all. This is particularly important in trials of complex interventions in 'real world' organisational settings where causality is difficult to determine. Complexity presents challenges for process evaluation, and process evaluations that tackle complexity are rarely reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMilbank Q
December 2011
The Sax Institute, University of Sydney, Menzies Centre for Health Policy, University of Queensland, Australia.
Context: Public health researchers make a limited but important contribution to policy development. Some engage with policy directly through committees, advisory boards, advocacy coalitions, ministerial briefings, intervention design consultation, and research partnerships with government, as well as by championing research-informed policy in the media. Nevertheless, the research utilization literature has paid little attention to these diverse roles and the ways that policymakers use them.
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