Hanson Sarah, Jones Andy
School of Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk, NR4 7TJ, UK.
Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk, NR4 7TJ, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2017 Aug 22;17(1):674. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4683-z.
Evidence-based approaches are requisite in evaluating public health programmes. Nowhere are they more necessary than physical activity interventions where evidence of effectiveness is often poor, especially within hard to reach groups. Our study reports on the quality of the evaluation of a government funded walking programme in five 'Walking Cities' in England. Cities were required to undertake a simple but robust evaluation using the Standard Evaluation Framework (SEF) for physical activity interventions to enable high quality, consistent evaluation. Our aim was not to evaluate the outcomes of this programme but to evaluate whether the evaluation process had been effective in generating new and reliable evidence on intervention design and what had worked in 'real world' circumstances.
Funding applications and final reports produced by the funder and the five walking cities were obtained. These totalled 16 documents which were systematically analysed against the 52 criteria in the SEF. Data were cross checked between the documents at the bid and reporting stage with reference to the SEF guidance notes.
Generally, the SEF reporting requirements were not followed well. The rationale for the interventions was badly described, the target population was not precisely specified, and neither was the method of recruitment. Demographics of individual participants, including socio-economic status were reported poorly, despite being a key criterion for funding.
Our study of the evaluations demonstrated a missed opportunity to confidently establish what worked and what did not work in walking programmes with particular populations. This limited the potential for evidence synthesis and to highlight innovative practice warranting further investigation. Our findings suggest a mandate for evaluability assessment. Used at the planning stage this may have ensured the development of realistic objectives and crucially may have identified innovative practice to implement and evaluate. Logic models may also have helped in the development of the intervention and its means of capturing evidence prior to implementation. It may be that research-practice partnerships between universities and practitioners could enhance this process. A lack of conceptual clarity means that replicability and scaling-up of effective interventions is difficult and the opportunity to learn from failure lost.
循证方法在评估公共卫生项目时必不可少。在身体活动干预方面,循证方法尤为必要,因为此类干预的有效性证据往往不足,在难以触及的群体中更是如此。我们的研究报告了对英格兰五个“步行城市”中一项由政府资助的步行项目的评估质量。这些城市被要求使用身体活动干预的标准评估框架(SEF)进行简单但有力的评估,以实现高质量、一致的评估。我们的目的不是评估该项目的结果,而是评估评估过程是否有效地产生了关于干预设计的新的可靠证据,以及在“现实世界”情况下哪些方法有效。
获取了资助者和五个步行城市编制的资金申请和最终报告。这些文件共计16份,根据SEF中的52条标准进行了系统分析。在投标和报告阶段,根据SEF指导说明对文件之间的数据进行了交叉核对。
总体而言,SEF报告要求未得到很好遵守。干预的基本原理描述不佳,目标人群未明确界定,招募方法也未明确说明。尽管社会经济地位等个体参与者的人口统计学信息是资助的关键标准,但报告情况也很差。
我们对评估的研究表明,错失了一个机会,未能确定针对特定人群的步行项目中哪些方法有效、哪些无效。这限制了证据综合的潜力,也无法突出值得进一步研究的创新做法。我们的研究结果表明需要进行可评估性评估。在规划阶段使用这一评估方法可能会确保制定现实可行的目标,关键是可能会确定需要实施和评估的创新做法。逻辑模型也可能有助于干预措施的制定及其在实施前收集证据的方法。大学与从业者之间缺乏概念清晰性意味着有效干预措施的可复制性和扩大规模很困难,也失去了从失败中学习的机会。