Waqa Gade, Moodie Marj, Snowdon Wendy, Latu Catherine, Coriakula Jeremaia, Allender Steven, Bell Colin
Pacific Research Center for the Prevention of Obesity and Non-Communicable Diseases (C-POND), College of Medicine Nursing and Health Sciences, Fiji National University, Private Mail Bag, Tamavua, Suva, Republic of Fiji.
Deakin Health Economics, Centre for Population Health Research, Faculty of Health, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2017 Aug 29;15(1):74. doi: 10.1186/s12961-017-0240-6.
Obesity and non-communicable diseases are significant public health issues globally and particularly in the Pacific. Poor diet is a major contributor to this issue and policy change is a powerful lever to improve food security and diet quality. This study aims to apply systems thinking to identify the causes and consequences of poor evidence use in food-related policymaking in selected government ministries in Fiji and to illicit strategies to strengthen the use of evidence in policymaking.
The Ministry of Health and Medical Services and the Ministry of Agriculture in Fiji were invited through their respective Permanent Secretaries to participate in the study. Three 180-minute group model building (GMB) workshops were conducted separately in each ministry over three consecutive days with selected policymakers who were instrumental in developing food-related policies designed to prevent non-communicable diseases. The GMB workshops mapped the process of food-related policymaking and the contribution of scientific and local evidence to the process, and identified actions to enhance the use of evidence in policymaking.
An average of 10 policymakers participated from each ministry. The causal loop diagrams produced by each ministry illustrated the causes and consequences of insufficient evidence use in developing food policies or precursors of the specific actions. These included (1) consultation, (2) engagement with stakeholders, (3) access and use of evidence, and (4) delays in policy processes. Participants agreed to potential leverage points on the themes above, addressing pertinent policymaker challenges in precursor control, including political influence, understanding of trade policies, competing government priorities and level of awareness on the problem. Specific actions for strengthening evidence use included training in policy development and research skills, and strengthening of coordination between ministries.
The GMB workshops improved participants' understanding of how different parts of the policy system interact. The causal loop diagrams and subsequent action plans enabled the identification of systems-level interventions in both ministries to improve evidence-informed policy development. A guide for integrating multi-sectoral consultation and stakeholder engagement in developing cross-cutting policies is currently being developed.
肥胖和非传染性疾病是全球尤其是太平洋地区的重大公共卫生问题。不良饮食是这一问题的主要成因,而政策变革是改善粮食安全和饮食质量的有力杠杆。本研究旨在运用系统思维,确定斐济部分政府部门在与食品相关的政策制定中证据使用不当的原因及后果,并探寻加强政策制定中证据使用的策略。
通过各自的常务秘书邀请斐济卫生与医疗服务部以及农业部参与本研究。在连续三天的时间里,分别在每个部门针对参与制定旨在预防非传染性疾病的食品相关政策的选定政策制定者举办了三场时长180分钟的小组模型构建(GMB)研讨会。GMB研讨会梳理了与食品相关的政策制定过程以及科学证据和本地证据在该过程中的作用,并确定了加强政策制定中证据使用的行动。
每个部门平均有10名政策制定者参与。每个部门绘制的因果循环图展示了在制定食品政策或具体行动的前期准备过程中证据使用不足的原因及后果。这些原因包括:(1)咨询;(2)与利益相关者的互动;(3)证据的获取与使用;(4)政策流程的延迟。参与者认同上述主题的潜在杠杆点,应对前期准备控制中政策制定者面临的相关挑战,包括政治影响、对贸易政策的理解、政府相互竞争的优先事项以及对问题的认识程度。加强证据使用的具体行动包括政策制定和研究技能培训,以及加强部门间的协调。
GMB研讨会提高了参与者对政策系统不同部分如何相互作用的理解。因果循环图及后续行动计划有助于确定两个部门在系统层面的干预措施,以改进基于证据的政策制定。目前正在制定一份在制定跨部门政策时整合多部门咨询和利益相关者参与的指南。