Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11889/8261
Title: Use of evidence to support healthy public policy: A policy effectiveness-feasibility loop
Other Titles: Utilisation de preuves à l'appui d'une politique publique saine: La boucle entre efficacité et faisabilité d'une politique
Authors: Bowman, Sarah 
Unwin, Nigel 
Critchley, Julia 
Capewell, Simon 
Husseini, Abdullatif 
Maziak, Wasim 
Zaman, Shahaduz 
Ben Romdhane, Habiba 
Fouad, Fouad 
Phillimore, Peter 
Unal, Belgin 
Khatib, Rana 
Shoaibi, Azza 
Ahmad, Balsam 
Keywords: Public health - Government policy;Communicable diseases - Preventions;Communicable disease control
Issue Date: 2012
Publisher: Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Abstract: Public policy plays a key role in improving population health and in the control of diseases, including non-communicable diseases. However, an evidence-based approach to formulating healthy public policy has been difficult to implement, partly on account of barriers that hinder integrated work between researchers and policy-makers. This paper describes a “policy effectiveness–feasibility loop” (PEFL) that brings together epidemiological modelling, local situation analysis and option appraisal to foster collaboration between researchers and policy-makers. Epidemiological modelling explores the determinants of trends in disease and the potential health benefits of modifying them. Situation analysis investigates the current conceptualization of policy, the level of policy awareness and commitment among key stakeholders, and what actually happens in practice, thereby helping to identify policy gaps. Option appraisal integrates epidemiological modelling and situation analysis to investigate the feasibility, costs and likely health benefits of various policy options. The authors illustrate how PEFL was used in a project to inform public policy for the prevention of cardiovascular diseases and diabetes in four parts of the Eastern Mediterranean. They conclude that PEFL may offer a useful framework for researchers and policy-makers to successfully work together to generate evidence-based policy, and they encourage further evaluation of this approach
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11889/8261
DOI: 10.2471/BLT.12.104968
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