Field P, Gauld R, Lawrence M
Department Human Nutrition, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, 9054, New Zealand.
Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, Center for Health Systems, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, 9054, New Zealand.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2016 Nov 25;14(1):84. doi: 10.1186/s12961-016-0154-8.
Enhancing the use of evidence in policymaking is critical to addressing the global burden of nutrition-related disease. Whilst the public health nutrition community has embraced evidence-informed policymaking, their approach of defining relevant evidence and evaluating policy has not brought about major shifts in policymaking. This article uses a public health nutrition case study to refine a novel theory-informed framework for enhancing the use of evidence in government public health nutrition policymaking. Our aim is to contribute insights from evidence-informed policy to the emerging paradigm in public health nutrition policymaking.
An enquiry framework informed by three groups of theories underpinning evidence-informed policy was used to explore the role of socially mediated processes on the use of evidence. A public health nutrition case study on food marketing to New Zealand children was conducted to refine the framework. Interview data collected from 54 individuals representing four key policy stakeholder groups, policymakers, academics, and food industry and non-government organisations were analysed using deductive and inductive thematic analysis. To enhance theoretical robustness, an alternative hypothesis of political explanations for evidence use was explored alongside the enquiry framework.
We found the prevailing political climate influenced the impact of advocacy for evidence inclusive processes at the meta-policy and policymaking process levels and in policy community relationships. Low levels of awareness of the impact of these processes on evidence use and uncoordinated advocacy resulted in the perpetuation of ad hoc policymaking. These findings informed refinements to the enquiry framework.
Our study highlights the role advocates can play in shifting government public health nutrition policymaking systems towards enhanced use of evidence. Our Advocacy for Evidence Use framework argues for a three-channel approach to advocacy for using evidence in the public interest. The framework provides a means for building a constituency for evidence use in public health nutrition and adds understanding about advocacy to the field of evidence-informed policy. Future research should examine the impact of coordinated advocacy on public health nutrition policymaking systems.
加强政策制定中证据的运用对于应对全球营养相关疾病负担至关重要。虽然公共卫生营养界已接受基于证据的政策制定,但他们界定相关证据和评估政策的方法并未在政策制定方面带来重大转变。本文采用一个公共卫生营养案例研究来完善一个新的理论导向框架,以加强政府公共卫生营养政策制定中证据的运用。我们的目的是为基于证据的政策提供见解,以推动公共卫生营养政策制定的新范式。
采用一个由支持基于证据的政策的三组理论所支撑的探究框架,以探讨社会介导过程在证据运用中的作用。开展了一项关于向新西兰儿童进行食品营销的公共卫生营养案例研究,以完善该框架。对从代表四个关键政策利益相关者群体(政策制定者、学者、食品行业以及非政府组织)的54个人收集的访谈数据,运用演绎和归纳主题分析法进行分析。为增强理论稳健性,在探究框架之外还探讨了关于证据运用的政治解释的另一种假设。
我们发现,当前的政治气候影响了在元政策和政策制定过程层面以及政策社群关系中对证据包容性过程的倡导效果。对这些过程对证据运用的影响认识不足以及倡导缺乏协调,导致临时决策持续存在。这些发现为完善探究框架提供了依据。
我们的研究凸显了倡导者在推动政府公共卫生营养政策制定系统更多地运用证据方面所能发挥的作用。我们的证据运用倡导框架主张采用三渠道方法来倡导为了公共利益运用证据。该框架提供了一种途径,以建立公共卫生营养领域证据运用的支持者群体,并在基于证据的政策领域增加对倡导的理解。未来的研究应考察协调倡导对公共卫生营养政策制定系统的影响。