Mazzucca Stephanie, Valko Cheryl A, Eyler Amy A, Macchi Marti, Lau Andrew, Alongi Jeanne, Robitscher John, Brownson Ross C
Prevention Research Center in St. Louis, Brown School, Washington University in St. Louis, One Brookings Drive, Campus Box 1196, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA.
National Association of Chronic Disease Directors, Decatur, GA, USA.
Implement Sci Commun. 2020;1. doi: 10.1186/s43058-020-00003-x. Epub 2020 Feb 25.
Public health agencies are responsible for implementing effective, evidence-based public health programs and policies to reduce the burden of chronic diseases. Evidence-based public health can be facilitated by modifiable administrative evidence-based practices (A-EBPs) (e.g., workforce development, organizational climate), yet little is known about how practitioners view A-EBPs. Thus, the purpose of this qualitative study was to understand state health department practitioners' perceptions about how A-EBPs are implemented and what facilitators and barriers exist to using A-EBPs.
Chronic disease prevention and health promotion program staff who were members of the National Association of Chronic Disease Directors were recruited to participate in telephone interviews using a snowball sampling technique. Interviews were transcribed verbatim, and transcripts were analyzed using a common codebook and the a priori method in NVivo.
Twenty seven interviews were conducted with practitioners in four states (5-8 interviews per state). All practitioners felt that their work unit culture is positive and that leadership encouraged and expected staff to use evidence-based processes. Participants discussed the provision of trainings and technical assistance as key to workforce development and how leaders communicate their expectations. Access to evidence, partnerships, and funding restrictions were the most commonly discussed barriers to the use of A-EBPs and EBDM.
Results of this study highlight practitioners' perspectives on promoting evidence-based public health in their departments. Findings can inform the development and refinement of resources to improve A-EBP use and organizational and leadership capacity of state health departments.
公共卫生机构负责实施有效、基于证据的公共卫生项目和政策,以减轻慢性病负担。可通过可修改的基于行政证据的实践(A-EBPs)(如劳动力发展、组织氛围)来推动基于证据的公共卫生,但对于从业者如何看待A-EBPs知之甚少。因此,这项定性研究的目的是了解州卫生部门从业者对A-EBPs实施方式以及使用A-EBPs存在哪些促进因素和障碍的看法。
采用滚雪球抽样技术,招募了作为慢性病主任全国协会成员的慢性病预防和健康促进项目工作人员参与电话访谈。访谈逐字记录,并使用通用编码手册和NVivo中的先验方法对记录进行分析。
对四个州的从业者进行了27次访谈(每个州5-8次访谈)。所有从业者都认为他们工作单位的文化是积极的,领导鼓励并期望员工采用基于证据的流程。参与者讨论了提供培训和技术援助是劳动力发展的关键,以及领导如何传达他们的期望。获取证据、伙伴关系和资金限制是使用A-EBPs和循证决策方法(EBDM)时最常讨论的障碍。
本研究结果突出了从业者对在其部门促进基于证据的公共卫生的看法。研究结果可为资源的开发和完善提供参考,以改善A-EBP的使用以及州卫生部门的组织和领导能力。