Departement of Information and Communication, Université Laval, 1055, Ave du Séminaire, Québec, G1V 0A6, Canada.
NUTRISS-INAF research Center, Université Laval, Quebec City, Québec, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 May 16;23(1):493. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-09455-y.
Behavioural sciences have been shown to support the development of more effective interventions aimed at promoting healthy lifestyles. However, the operationalization of this knowledge seems to be sub-optimal in public health. Effective knowledge transfer strategies are thus needed to optimize the use of knowledge from behavioural sciences in this field. To this end, the present study examined public health practitioners' perceptions and use of theories and frameworks from behavioural sciences to design health promotion interventions.
This study adopted an exploratory qualitative design. Semi-structured interviews were conducted among 27 public health practitioners from across Canada to explore current intervention development processes, the extent to which they integrate theory and framework from behavioural sciences, and their perceptions regarding the use of this knowledge to inform intervention design. Practitioners from the public sector or non-profit/private organizations who were involved in the development of interventions aimed at promoting physical activity, healthy eating, or other healthy lifestyle habits (e.g., not smoking) were eligible to participate.
Public health practitioners generally agreed that behaviour change is an important goal of public health interventions. On the other hand, behavioural science theories and frameworks did not appear to be fully integrated in the design of public health interventions. The main reasons were (1) a perceived lack of fit with current professional roles and tasks; (2) a greater reliance on experiential-produced knowledge rather than academic knowledge (mainly for tailoring interventions to local setting characteristics); (3) the presence of a fragmented knowledge base; (4) the belief that theories and frameworks require too much time and resources to be operationalized; and 4) the belief that using behavioural sciences might undermine partnership building.
This study provided valuable insights that may inform knowledge transfer strategies that could be optimally designed to support the integration of behavioural sciences theories and frameworks into public health practices.
行为科学已被证明可以支持开发更有效的干预措施,以促进健康的生活方式。然而,在公共卫生领域,这种知识的实施似乎并不理想。因此,需要有效的知识转移策略来优化行为科学知识在该领域的应用。为此,本研究考察了公共卫生从业者对行为科学理论和框架的看法和使用,以设计健康促进干预措施。
本研究采用探索性定性设计。在加拿大各地的 27 名公共卫生从业者中进行了半结构化访谈,以探讨当前的干预措施制定过程、他们在多大程度上整合了行为科学的理论和框架,以及他们对利用这些知识为干预措施设计提供信息的看法。公共部门或非营利/私营组织的从业者,他们参与制定旨在促进体育活动、健康饮食或其他健康生活方式习惯(如不吸烟)的干预措施,有资格参与。
公共卫生从业者普遍认为行为改变是公共卫生干预措施的一个重要目标。另一方面,行为科学理论和框架似乎并没有完全融入公共卫生干预措施的设计中。主要原因是:(1)与当前的专业角色和任务不匹配;(2)更多地依赖经验产生的知识而不是学术知识(主要是为了使干预措施适应当地的特点);(3)知识基础分散;(4)认为理论和框架需要太多的时间和资源来实施;以及(4)认为使用行为科学可能会破坏伙伴关系的建立。
本研究提供了有价值的见解,可能为知识转移策略提供信息,这些策略可以被优化,以支持将行为科学理论和框架纳入公共卫生实践。