Lee Karen, van Nassau Femke, Grunseit Anne, Conte Kathleen, Milat Andrew, Wolfenden Luke, Bauman Adrian
School of Public Health, University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, 2050, Australia.
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Ultimo, NSW, 2007, Australia.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2020 Oct 9;18(1):118. doi: 10.1186/s12961-020-00636-3.
While known efficacious preventive health interventions exist, the current capacity to scale up these interventions is limited. In recent years, much attention has focussed on developing frameworks and methods for scale-up yet, in practice, the pathway for scale-up is seldom linear and may be highly dependent on contextual circumstances. Few studies have examined the process of scaling up from decision to implementation nor examined the sustainability of scaled-up interventions. This study explores decision-makers' perceptions from real-world scaled-up case studies to examine how scale-up decisions were made and describe enablers of successful scale-up and sustainability.
This qualitative study included 29 interviews conducted with purposively sampled key Australian policy-makers, practitioners and researchers experienced in scale-up. Semi-structured interview questions obtained information regarding case studies of scaled-up interventions. The Framework Analysis method was used as the primary method of analysis of the interview data to inductively generate common and divergent themes within qualitative data across cases.
A total of 31 case studies of public health interventions were described by interview respondents based on their experiences. According to the interviewees' perceptions, decisions to scale up commonly occurred either opportunistically, when funding became available, or when a deliberate decision was made and funding allocated. The latter scenario was more common when the intervention aligned with specific political or strategic goals. Decisions to scale up were driven by a variety of key actors such as politicians, senior policy-makers and practitioners in the health system. Drivers of a successful scale-up process included good governance, clear leadership, and adequate resourcing and expertise. Establishing accountability structures and appropriate engagement mechanisms to encourage the uptake of interventions were also key enablers. Sustainability was influenced by evidence of impact as well as good acceptability among the general or target population.
Much like Kingdon's Multiple Streams Theory of 'policy windows', there is a conceptually similar 'window for scale-up', driven by a complex interplay of factors such as political need, strategic context, funding and key actors. Researchers and policy-makers need to consider scalability from the outset and prepare for when the window for scale-up opens. Decision-makers need to provide longer term funding for scale-up to facilitate longer term sustainability and build on the resources already invested for the scale-up process.
虽然存在已知有效的预防性健康干预措施,但目前扩大这些干预措施规模的能力有限。近年来,很多注意力都集中在制定扩大规模的框架和方法上,然而在实践中,扩大规模的途径很少是线性的,并且可能高度依赖于具体情况。很少有研究考察从决策到实施的扩大规模过程,也没有考察扩大规模干预措施的可持续性。本研究从实际扩大规模的案例研究中探索决策者的看法,以考察扩大规模的决策是如何做出的,并描述成功扩大规模和实现可持续性的推动因素。
这项定性研究包括对29名澳大利亚关键政策制定者、从业者和有扩大规模经验的研究人员进行的访谈,这些人员是经过有目的抽样选取的。半结构化访谈问题获取了有关扩大规模干预措施案例研究的信息。框架分析法被用作访谈数据分析的主要方法,以归纳性地在跨案例的定性数据中生成共同和不同的主题。
访谈受访者根据他们的经验描述了总共31个公共卫生干预措施的案例研究。根据受访者的看法,扩大规模的决策通常在有资金可用时机会性地做出,或者在做出深思熟虑的决策并分配资金时做出。当干预措施与特定的政治或战略目标一致时,后一种情况更为常见。扩大规模的决策由各种关键行为者推动,如政治家、高级政策制定者和卫生系统中的从业者。成功扩大规模过程的驱动因素包括良好的治理、明确的领导以及充足的资源和专业知识。建立问责制结构和适当的参与机制以鼓励采用干预措施也是关键的推动因素。可持续性受到影响证据以及在一般人群或目标人群中的良好可接受性的影响。
与金登关于“政策窗口”的多源流理论非常相似,存在一个概念上类似的“扩大规模窗口”,由政治需求、战略背景、资金和关键行为者等因素的复杂相互作用驱动。研究人员和政策制定者需要从一开始就考虑可扩展性,并为扩大规模窗口打开时做好准备。决策者需要为扩大规模提供长期资金,以促进长期可持续性,并在已经为扩大规模过程投入的资源基础上再接再厉。