McMaster University.
Milbank Q. 2013 Sep;91(3):604-48. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12026.
Evidence briefs have emerged as a promising approach to synthesizing the best available research evidence for health system policymakers and stakeholders. An evidence brief may draw on systematic reviews and many other types of policy-relevant information, including local data and studies, to describe a problem, options for addressing it, and key implementation considerations. We conducted a systematic review to examine the ways in which context- and issue-related factors influence the perceived usefulness of evidence briefs among their intended users.
We used a critical interpretive synthesis approach to review both empirical and nonempirical literature and to develop a model that explains how context and issues influence policymakers' and stakeholders' views of the utility of evidence briefs prepared for priority policy issues. We used a "compass" question to create a detailed search strategy and conducted electronic searches in CINAHL, EMBASE, HealthSTAR, IPSA, MEDLINE, OAIster (gray literature), ProQuest A&I Theses, ProQuest (Sociological Abstracts, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, Worldwide Political Science Abstracts, International Bibliography of Social Sciences, PAIS, Political Science), PsychInfo, Web of Science, and WilsonWeb (Social Science Abstracts). Finally, we used a grounded and interpretive analytic approach to synthesize the results.
Of the 4,461 papers retrieved, 3,908 were excluded and 553 were assessed for "relevance," with 137 included in the initial sample of papers to be analyzed and an additional 23 purposively sampled to fill conceptual gaps. Several themes emerged: (1) many established types of "evidence" are viewed as useful content in an evidence brief, along with several promising formatting features; (2) contextual factors, particularly the institutions, interests, and values of a given context, can influence views of evidence briefs; (3) whether an issue is polarizing and whether it is salient (or not) and familiar (or not) to actors in the policy arena can influence views of evidence briefs prepared for that issue; (4) influential factors can emerge in several ways (as context driven, issue driven, or a result of issue-context resonance); (5) these factors work through two primary pathways, affecting either the users or the producers of briefs; and (6) these factors influence views of evidence briefs through a variety of mechanisms.
Those persons funding and preparing evidence briefs need to consider a variety of context- and issue-related factors when deciding how to make them most useful in policymaking.
证据摘要已成为为卫生系统政策制定者和利益相关者综合最佳现有研究证据的一种很有前景的方法。证据摘要可能会借鉴系统评价和许多其他类型的与政策相关的信息,包括当地数据和研究,以描述一个问题、解决问题的方案以及关键的实施注意事项。我们进行了一项系统评价,以研究背景和问题相关因素如何影响其预期使用者对证据摘要的有用性的看法。
我们使用批判解释性综合方法来审查实证和非实证文献,并开发了一个模型,解释背景和问题如何影响政策制定者和利益相关者对为优先政策问题编写的证据摘要的实用性的看法。我们使用“指南针”问题创建了一个详细的搜索策略,并在 CINAHL、EMBASE、HealthSTAR、IPSA、MEDLINE、OAIster(灰色文献)、ProQuest A&I 论文、ProQuest(社会学摘要、应用社会科学索引和摘要、世界政治科学摘要、国际社会科学文献摘要、PAIS、政治科学)、PsychInfo、Web of Science 和 WilsonWeb(社会科学摘要)中进行了电子检索。最后,我们使用扎根和解释性分析方法对结果进行综合。
在检索到的 4461 篇论文中,有 3908 篇被排除在外,有 553 篇被评估为“相关”,其中 137 篇被纳入初始分析论文样本,另外 23 篇被有针对性地抽样以填补概念空白。出现了几个主题:(1)许多已建立的“证据”类型被视为证据摘要中的有用内容,同时还有一些有前途的格式特征;(2)背景因素,特别是特定背景下的机构、利益和价值观,可以影响对证据摘要的看法;(3)问题是否具有两极分化性,以及该问题对政策领域的行为者是否突出(或不突出)和熟悉(或不熟悉),可以影响为该问题编写的证据摘要的看法;(4)有影响力的因素可以通过几种方式出现(作为背景驱动、问题驱动或问题-背景共鸣的结果);(5)这些因素通过两条主要途径发挥作用,影响摘要的使用者或制作者;(6)这些因素通过多种机制影响对证据摘要的看法。
那些为编写证据摘要提供资金和编写证据摘要的人在决定如何使其在决策中最有用时,需要考虑各种背景和问题相关因素。