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== Hakuja Web of Sciencesta ==
== Hakuja Web of Sciencesta ==


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=== Decision making and knowledge production ===
 
Results: 65, 10 articles selected by hand
Results: 65, 10 articles selected by hand


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=== Evidence-based policy ===


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Results: 91, hand-picked 26
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(from Web of Science Core Collection)
You searched for: TS=("evidence-based policy")
You searched for: TS=("evidence-based policy")
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=== Evidence-informed policy making ===
 
Results: 49, 24 articles selected by hand
(from Web of Science Core Collection)
You searched for: TOPIC: ("evidence-informed policy making")
 
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++++++++ ENNEN Publication Type -riviä kommentti relevanssista
PT J
AU Bedard, PO
  Ouimet, M
AF Bedard, Pierre-Olivier
  Ouimet, Mathieu
TI Persistent misunderstandings about evidence-based (sorry: informed!)
  policy-making
SO ARCHIVES OF PUBLIC HEALTH
AB Background: The field of research on knowledge mobilization and evidence-informed policy-making has seen enduring debates related to various fundamental assumptions such as the definition of 'evidence', the relative validity of various research methods, the actual role of evidence to inform policy-making, etc. In many cases, these discussions serve a useful purpose, but they also stem from serious disagreement on methodological and epistemological issues.
  Discussion: This essay reviews the rationale for evidence-informed policy-making by examining some of the common claims made about the aims and practices of this perspective on public policy. Supplementing the existing justifications for evidence-based policy making, we argue in favor of a greater inclusion of research evidence in the policy process but in a structured fashion, based on methodological considerations. In this respect, we present an overview of the intricate relation between policy questions and appropriate research designs.
  Summary: By closely examining the relation between research questions and research designs, we claim that the usual points of disagreement are mitigated. For instance, when focusing on the variety of research designs that can answer a range of policy questions, the common critical claim about 'RCT-based policy-making' seems to lose some, if not all of its grip.
TC 0
Z9 0
SN 0778-7367
EI 2049-3258
PD JUL 20
PY 2016
VL 74
AR 31
DI 10.1186/s13690-016-0142-z
UT WOS:000380325300001
PM 27441090
ER
 
PT J
AU VanLandingham, G
  Silloway, T
AF VanLandingham, Gary
  Silloway, Torey
TI Bridging the Gap between Evidence and Policy Makers: A Case Study of the
  Pew-MacArthur Results First Initiative
SO PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REVIEW
AB Developing ways to bridge the long-recognized gap between researchers and policy makers is increasingly important in this age of constrained public resources. As noted by recent scholarship, progress toward evidence-informed policy making requires both improving the supply of research that is reliable, timely, and relevant to the policy process and promoting demand and support for this information among decision makers. This article presents a case study of the Pew-MacArthur Results First Initiative, which is working in a growing number of state and local governments to build systems that bring rigorous evidence on "what works" into their budget processes and to support its use in resource allocation decisions. The initiative's experience to date is promising, although creating lasting and dynamic evidence-based policy-making systems requires a long-term commitment by both researchers and policy makers.
TC 0
Z9 0
SN 0033-3352
EI 1540-6210
PD JUL-AUG
PY 2016
VL 76
IS 4
BP 542
EP 546
DI 10.1111/puar.12603
UT WOS:000379761300007
ER
 
PT J
AU Head, BW
AF Head, Brian W.
TI Toward More "Evidence-Informed" Policy Making?
SO PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REVIEW
AB The quality of public decision making depends significantly on the quality of analysis and advice provided through public organizations. Champions of "evidence-informed" policy making claim that rigorous evaluation practices can significantly improve attainment of cost-effective outcomes. After decades of experience, performance information is more sophisticated, but evaluation practices and capabilities vary enormously. Public agencies gather and process vast amounts of information, but there has been little analysis of how this information is actually utilized for policy and program improvement. This article examines how government agencies use evidence about policy and program effectiveness, with attention to four themes: ( 1) the prospects for improving "evidence-informed" policy making, ( 2) the diversity of practices concerning evidence utilization and evaluation across types of public agencies and policy arenas, ( 3) recent attempts to "institutionalize" evaluation as a core feature of policy development and budget approval, and ( 4) the relationships between public agencies and nongovernmental sources of expertise.
TC 0
Z9 0
SN 0033-3352
EI 1540-6210
PD MAY-JUN
PY 2016
VL 76
IS 3
BP 472
EP U22
DI 10.1111/puar.12475
UT WOS:000379760100018
ER
 
PT J
AU Alexandrou, A
AF Alexandrou, Alex
TI Making Evidence Matter: A New Perspective for Evidence-Informed Policy
  Making in Education
SO EDUCATIONAL MANAGEMENT ADMINISTRATION & LEADERSHIP
TC 0
Z9 0
SN 1741-1432
EI 1741-1440
PD MAY
PY 2016
VL 44
IS 3
BP 532
EP 533
DI 10.1177/1741143214539083
UT WOS:000375716400011
ER
 
PT J
AU Hawkes, S
  Aulakh, BK
  Jadeja, N
  Jimenez, M
  Buse, K
  Anwar, I
  Barge, S
  Odubanjo, MO
  Shukla, A
  Ghaffar, A
  Whitworth, J
AF Hawkes, Sarah
  Aulakh, Bhupinder K.
  Jadeja, Nidhee
  Jimenez, Michelle
  Buse, Kent
  Anwar, Iqbal
  Barge, Sandhya
  Odubanjo, M. Oladoyin
  Shukla, Abhay
  Ghaffar, Abdul
  Whitworth, Jimmy
TI Strengthening capacity to apply health research evidence in policy
  making: experience from four countries
SO HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING
AB Increasing the use of evidence in policy making means strengthening capacity on both the supply and demand sides of evidence production. However, little experience of strengthening the capacity of policy makers in low- and middle- income countries has been published to date. We describe the experiences of five projects (in Bangladesh, Gambia, India and Nigeria), where collaborative teams of researchers and policy makers/policy influencers worked to strengthen policy maker capacity to increase the use of evidence in policy. Activities were focused on three (interlinked) levels of capacity building: individual, organizational and, occasionally, institutional. Interventions included increasing access to research/data, promoting frequent interactions between researchers and members of the policy communities, and increasing the receptivity towards research/data in policy making or policy-implementing organizations. Teams were successful in building the capacity of individuals to access, understand and use evidence/data. Strengthening organizational capacity generally involved support to infrastructure (e.g. through information technology resources) and was also deemed to be successful. There was less appetite to address the need to strengthen institutional capacity-although this was acknowledged to be fundamental to promoting sustainable use of evidence, it was also recognized as requiring resources, legitimacy and regulatory support from policy makers. Evaluation across the three spheres of capacity building was made more challenging by the lack of agreed upon evaluation frameworks. In this article, we propose a new framework for assessing the impact of capacity strengthening activities to promote the use of evidence/data in policy making. Our evaluation concluded that strengthening the capacity of individuals and organizations is an important but likely insufficient step in ensuring the use of evidence/data in policy-cycles. Sustainability of evidence-informed policy making requires strengthening institutional capacity, as well as understanding and addressing the political environment, and particularly the incentives facing policy makers that supports the use of evidence in policy cycles.
OI Hawkes, Sarah/0000-0003-1062-3538
TC 1
Z9 1
SN 0268-1080
EI 1460-2237
PD MAR
PY 2016
VL 31
IS 2
BP 161
EP 170
DI 10.1093/heapol/czv032
UT WOS:000374226000003
PM 25900967
ER
 
PT J
AU Choi, BCK
  Li, LP
  Lu, YG
  Zhang, LR
  Zhu, Y
  Pak, AWP
  Chen, Y
  Little, J
AF Choi, Bernard C. K.
  Li, Liping
  Lu, Yaogui
  Zhang, Li R.
  Zhu, Yao
  Pak, Anita W. P.
  Chen, Yue
  Little, Julian
TI Bridging the gap between science and policy: an international survey of
  scientists and policy makers in China and Canada
SO IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE
AB Background: Bridging the gap between science and policy is an important task in evidence-informed policy making. The objective of this study is to prioritize ways to bridge the gap.
  Methods: The study was based on an online survey of high-ranking scientists and policy makers who have a senior position in universities and governments in the health sector in China and Canada. The sampling frame comprised of universities with schools of public health and medicine and various levels of government in health and public health. Participants included university presidents and professors, and government deputy ministers, directors general and directors working in the health field. Fourteen strategies were presented to the participants for ranking as current ways and ideal ways in the future to bridge the gap between science and policy.
  Results: Over a 3-month survey period, there were 121 participants in China and 86 in Canada with response rates of 30.0 and 15.9 %, respectively. The top strategies selected by respondents included focus on policy (conducting research that focuses on policy questions), science-policy forums, and policy briefs, both as current ways and ideal ways to bridge the gap between science and policy. Conferences were considered a priority strategy as a current way, but not an ideal way in the future. Canadian participants were more in favor of using information technology (web-based portals and email updates) than their Chinese counterparts. Among Canadian participants, two strategies that were ranked low as current ways (collaboration in study design and collaboration in analysis) became a priority as ideal ways. This could signal a change in thinking in shifting the focus from the "back end" or "downstream" (knowledge dissemination) of the knowledge transfer process to the "front end" or "upstream" (knowledge generation).
  Conclusions: Our international study has confirmed a number of previously reported priority strategies to bridge the gap between science and policy. More importantly, our study has contributed to the future work on evidence-based policy making by comparing the responses from China and Canada and the current and ideal way for the future. Our study shows that the concept and strategies of bridging the gap between science and policy are not static but varying in space and evolving over time.
TC 1
Z9 1
SN 1748-5908
PD FEB 6
PY 2016
VL 11
AR 16
DI 10.1186/s13012-016-0377-7
UT WOS:000369909000001
PM 26852131
ER
 
PT J
AU Shroff, Z
  Aulakh, B
  Gilson, L
  Agyepong, IA
  El-Jardali, F
  Ghaffar, A
AF Shroff, Zubin
  Aulakh, Bhupinder
  Gilson, Lucy
  Agyepong, Irene A.
  El-Jardali, Fadi
  Ghaffar, Abdul
TI Incorporating research evidence into decision-making processes:
  researcher and decision-maker perceptions from five low- and
  middle-income countries
SO HEALTH RESEARCH POLICY AND SYSTEMS
AB Background: The 'Sponsoring National Processes for Evidence-Informed Policy Making in the Health Sector of Developing Countries' program was launched by the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research, WHO, in July 2008. The program aimed to catalyse the use of evidence generated through health policy and systems research in policymaking processes through (1) promoting researchers and policy advocates to present their evidence in a manner that is easy for policymakers to understand and use, (2) creating mechanisms to spur the demand for and application of research evidence in policymaking, and (3) increased interaction between researchers, policy advocates, and policymakers. Grants ran for three years and five projects were supported in Argentina, Bangladesh, Cameroon, Nigeria and Zambia. This paper seeks to understand why projects in some settings were perceived by the key stakeholders involved to have made progress towards their goals, whereas others were perceived to have not done so well. Additionally, by comparing experiences across five countries, we seek to illustrate general learnings to inform future evidence-to-policy efforts in low-and middle-income countries.
  Methods: We adopted the theory of knowledge translation developed by Jacobson et al. (J Health Serv Res Policy 8(2):94-9, 2003) as a framing device to reflect on project experiences across the five cases. Using data from the projects' external evaluation reports, which included information from semi-structured interviews and quantitative evaluation surveys of those involved in projects, and supplemented by information from the projects' individual technical reports, we applied the theoretical framework with a partially grounded approach to analyse each of the cases and make comparisons.
  Results and conclusion: There was wide variation across projects in the type of activities carried out as well as their intensity. Based on our findings, we can conclude that projects perceived as having made progress towards their goals were characterized by the coming together of a number of domains identified by the theory. The domains of Jacobson's theoretical framework, initially developed for high-income settings, are of relevance to the low-and middle-income country context, but may need modification to be fully applicable to these settings. Specifically, the relative fragility of institutions and the concomitantly more significant role of individual leaders point to the need to look at leadership as an additional domain influencing the evidence-to-policy process.
TC 0
Z9 0
SN 1478-4505
PD NOV 30
PY 2015
VL 13
AR 70
DI 10.1186/s12961-015-0059-y
UT WOS:000365438400001
PM 26621364
ER
 
PT J
AU Lapointe, L
  Ouimet, M
  Charbonneau, M
  Beorofei, ET
AF Lapointe, Luc
  Ouimet, Mathieu
  Charbonneau, Marissa
  Beorofei, Emilie T.
TI Do Canadian university students in Political Science and Public
  Administration learn to perform critical appraisal?
SO CANADIAN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION-ADMINISTRATION PUBLIQUE DU CANADA
AB The ability to critically appraise empirical studies of any type is a prerequisite to evidence-informed policy making. We scanned the syllabi of all Canadian university undergraduate and graduate programs in public affairs, public administration, public policy and political science. Our findings suggest that evidence-informed policy is not yet institutionalized in most public administration and political science training curricula. We conducted a systematic review of prospective experimental and quasi-experimental studies examining the effect of university courses aimed at training social sciences students in critical appraisal, but did not find such a study.
  Sommaire L'aptitude a evaluer de maniere critique les etudes empiriques en tous genres est une condition prealable a l'elaboration de politiques fondee sur des donnees probantes. Nous avons examine sommairement les programmes de cours du premier cycle et des cycles superieurs en affaires publiques, administration publique, politique publique et sciences politiques de toutes les universites canadiennes. Nos resultats laissent entendre que la politique fondee sur les donnees probantes n'est pas encore institutionnalisee dans la plupart des programmes de formation en administration publique et en sciences politiques. Nous avons mene un examen systematique d'etudes prospectives experimentales et quasi-experimentales en etudiant l'effet de cours universitaires visant a donner aux etudiants en sciences politiques une formation en evaluation critique, mais n'avons pas trouve une telle etude.
TC 0
Z9 0
SN 0008-4840
EI 1754-7121
PD SEP
PY 2015
VL 58
IS 3
BP 487
EP 503
DI 10.1111/capa.12124
UT WOS:000360805000008
ER
 
PT J
AU Ouimet, M
  Lapointe, L
  Leon, G
AF Ouimet, Mathieu
  Lapointe, Luc
  Leon, Gregory
TI Examining the feasibility and impact of a graduate public administration
  course in evidence-informed policy
SO EVIDENCE & POLICY
AB A pilot controlled before-and-after design was used to assess the impact of a new master-level course in evidence-informed policy making on students' basic knowledge in evidence-based practice. The primary outcome variable was the mean percentage of pre-post improvement on the knowledge test. In the treatment group, the mean percentage of pre-post improvement to the knowledge test was 36.9% (SD 27.5), compared to 11.3% (SD 19.1) in the control group composed of students exposed to the traditional graduate-level research methodology course in Political Science. However, the mean score on the post-test for the treatment group was only half of the maximum score.
TC 1
Z9 1
SN 1744-2648
EI 1744-2656
PD MAY
PY 2015
VL 11
IS 2
SI SI
BP 149
EP 168
DI 10.1332/174426414X14165770542276
UT WOS:000356466000002
ER
 
PT J
AU Valente, A
  Castellani, T
  Larsen, M
  Aro, AR
AF Valente, Adriana
  Castellani, Tommaso
  Larsen, Maja
  Aro, Arja R.
TI Models and visions of science-policy interaction: Remarks from a Delphi
  study in Italy
SO SCIENCE AND PUBLIC POLICY
AB In recent decades, many disciplines have dealt with the relationship between scientific research and policy-making, and many different models for science-policy interactions have been proposed. This paper aims to investigate the models of science-policy interaction implicitly or explicitly adopted by stakeholders, by means of a Delphi study performed with Italian researchers, politicians, doctors and journalists. The study was developed within the framework of the European project on Research into Policy to Enhance Physical Activity, which aimed to improve evidence-informed policy-making using the field of physical activity as the case study. Our results show the persistence of the traditional linear model and how it coexists with subsequent models in the same individual visions.
TC 3
Z9 3
SN 0302-3427
EI 1471-5430
PD APR
PY 2015
VL 42
IS 2
BP 228
EP 241
DI 10.1093/scipol/scu039
UT WOS:000355224500007
ER
 
PT J
AU El-Jardali, F
  Fadlallah, R
AF El-Jardali, Fadi
  Fadlallah, Racha
TI A call for a backward design to knowledge translation
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH POLICY AND MANAGEMENT-IJHPM
AB Despite several calls to support evidence-informed policy-making, variations in uptake of evidence into policy persist. This editorial brings together and builds on previous Knowledge Translation (KT) frameworks and theories to present a simple, yet, holistic approach for promoting evidence-informed policies. The proposed conceptual framework is characterized by its impact-oriented approach and its view of KT as a continuum from the evidence synthesis stage to uptake and evaluation, while highlighting capacity and resource requirement at every step. A practical example is given to guide readers through the different steps of the framework. With a growing interest in strengthening evidence-informed policy-making, there is a need to continuously develop theories to understand and improve the science of KT and its implementation within the field of policy-making.
TC 4
Z9 4
SN 2322-5939
PD JAN
PY 2015
VL 4
IS 1
BP 1
EP 5
DI 10.15171/ijhpm.2015.10
UT WOS:000378652500001
PM 25584357
ER
 
PT J
AU Brown, C
AF Brown, Chris
TI The policy agora: how power inequalities affect the interaction between
  researchers and policy makers
SO EVIDENCE & POLICY
AB This paper examines notions of power in relation to evidence-informed policy making and explores four key areas. First, I outline contemporary conceptualisations of how power operates in society; second,! spotlight the implications of power inequalities for how evidence is used by policy makers (and present the policy 'agora'; a discursively controlled paradigm of ideology and epistemology which serves to distinguish between the types of evidence that policy makers will and won't engage with); third, I then define what I consider as evidence 'misuse'; before finishing with an analysis of why evidence misuse materialises and how its enactment might be minimised.
TC 0
Z9 0
SN 1744-2648
EI 1744-2656
PD AUG
PY 2014
VL 10
IS 3
BP 421
EP 438
DI 10.1332/174426514X672353
UT WOS:000341064500007
ER
 
PT J
AU Weatherford, S
AF Weatherford, Stephen
TI Making evidence matter: a new perspective for evidence-informed policy
  making in education
SO EVIDENCE & POLICY
TC 0
Z9 0
SN 1744-2648
EI 1744-2656
PD AUG
PY 2014
VL 10
IS 3
BP 458
EP 462
UT WOS:000341064500009
ER
 
PT J
AU Dicks, LV
  Hodge, I
  Randall, NP
  Scharlemann, JPW
  Siriwardena, GM
  Smith, HG
  Smith, RK
  Sutherland, WJ
AF Dicks, Lynn V.
  Hodge, Ian
  Randall, Nicola P.
  Scharlemann, Joern P. W.
  Siriwardena, Gavin M.
  Smith, Henrik G.
  Smith, Rebecca K.
  Sutherland, William J.
TI A Transparent Process for "Evidence-Informed" Policy Making
SO CONSERVATION LETTERS
AB Political institutions are keen to use the best available scientific knowledge in decision-making. For environmental policy, relevant scientific evidence can be complex and extensive, so expert judgment is frequently relied upon, without clear links to the evidence itself. We propose a new transparent process for incorporating research evidence into policy decisions, involving independent synopsis of evidence relating to all possible policy options combined with expert evaluation of what the evidence means for specific policy questions. We illustrate the process using reforms of the European Union's Common Agricultural Policy currently being negotiated. Under the reform proposals, 30% of direct payments to farmers will become conditional upon three "compulsory greening measures." Independently, we compiled and evaluated experimental evidence for the effects of 85 interventions to protect wildlife on northern European farmland, 12 of which correspond to aspects of the compulsory greening measures. Our evaluation clearly indicates evidence of consistent wildlife benefits for some, but not all, of the greening measures. The process of evidence synopsis with expert evaluation has three advantages over existing efforts to incorporate evidence into policy decisions: it provides a clear evidence audit trail, allows rapid response to new policy contexts, and clarifies sources of uncertainty.
RI Scharlemann, Jorn/A-4737-2008;
OI Scharlemann, Jorn/0000-0002-2834-6367; Sutherland,
  William/0000-0002-6498-0437
TC 10
Z9 10
SN 1755-263X
PD MAR
PY 2014
VL 7
IS 2
BP 119
EP 125
DI 10.1111/conl.12046
UT WOS:000334164400006
ER
 
PT J
AU Liverani, M
  Hawkins, B
  Parkhurst, JO
AF Liverani, Marco
  Hawkins, Benjamin
  Parkhurst, Justin O.
TI Political and Institutional Influences on the Use of Evidence in Public
  Health Policy. A Systematic Review
SO PLOS ONE
AB Background: There is increasing recognition that the development of evidence-informed health policy is not only a technical problem of knowledge exchange or translation, but also a political challenge. Yet, while political scientists have long considered the nature of political systems, the role of institutional structures, and the political contestation of policy issues as central to understanding policy decisions, these issues remain largely unexplored by scholars of evidence-informed policy making.
  Methods: We conducted a systematic review of empirical studies that examined the influence of key features of political systems and institutional mechanisms on evidence use, and contextual factors that may contribute to the politicisation of health evidence. Eligible studies were identified through searches of seven health and social sciences databases, websites of relevant organisations, the British Library database, and manual searches of academic journals. Relevant findings were extracted using a uniform data extraction tool and synthesised by narrative review.
  Findings: 56 studies were selected for inclusion. Relevant political and institutional aspects affecting the use of health evidence included the level of state centralisation and democratisation, the influence of external donors and organisations, the organisation and function of bureaucracies, and the framing of evidence in relation to social norms and values. However, our understanding of such influences remains piecemeal given the limited number of empirical analyses on this subject, the paucity of comparative works, and the limited consideration of political and institutional theory in these studies.
  Conclusions: This review highlights the need for a more explicit engagement with the political and institutional factors affecting the use of health evidence in decision-making. A more nuanced understanding of evidence use in health policy making requires both additional empirical studies of evidence use, and an engagement with theories and approaches beyond the current remit of public health or knowledge utilisation studies.
TC 18
Z9 18
SN 1932-6203
PD OCT 30
PY 2013
VL 8
IS 10
AR e77404
DI 10.1371/journal.pone.0077404
UT WOS:000326334500026
PM 24204823
ER
 
PT J
AU Koon, AD
  Rao, KD
  Tran, NT
  Ghaffar, A
AF Koon, Adam D.
  Rao, Krishna D.
  Tran, Nhan T.
  Ghaffar, Abdul
TI Embedding health policy and systems research into decision-making
  processes in low- and middle-income countries
SO HEALTH RESEARCH POLICY AND SYSTEMS
AB Attention is increasingly directed to bridging the gap between the production of knowledge and its use for health decision-making in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). An important and underdeveloped area of health policy and systems research (HPSR) is the organization of this process. Drawing from an interdisciplinary conception of embeddedness, a literature review was conducted to identify examples of embedded HPSR used to inform decision-making in LMICs. The results of the literature review were organized according to the World Health Organization's Building Blocks Framework. Next, a conceptual model was created to illustrate the arrangement of organizations that produce embedded HPSR and the characteristics that facilitate its uptake into the arena of decision-making. We found that multiple forces converge to create context-specific pathways through which evidence enters into decision-making. Depending on the decision under consideration, the literature indicates that decision-makers may call upon an intricate combination of actors for sourcing HPSR. While proximity to decision-making does have advantages, it is not the position of the organization within the network, but rather the qualities the organization possesses, that enable it to be embedded. Our findings suggest that four qualities influence embeddedness: reputation, capacity, quality of connections to decision-makers, and quantity of connections to decision-makers and others. In addition to this, the policy environment (e.g. the presence of legislation governing the use of HPSR, presence of strong civil society, etc.) strongly influences uptake. Through this conceptual model, we can understand which conditions are likely to enhance uptake of HPSR in LMIC health systems. This raises several important considerations for decision-makers and researchers about the arrangement and interaction of evidence-generating organizations in health systems.
TC 11
Z9 12
SN 1478-4505
PD AUG 8
PY 2013
VL 11
AR 30
DI 10.1186/1478-4505-11-30
UT WOS:000323009800001
PM 23924162
ER
 
PT J
AU Hameen-Anttila, K
  Luhtanen, S
  Airaksinen, M
  Pohjanoksa-Mantyla, M
AF Hameen-Anttila, Katri
  Luhtanen, Suvi
  Airaksinen, Marja
  Pohjanoksa-Mantyla, Marika
TI Developing a national medicines information strategy in Finland-A
  stakeholders' perspective on the strengths, challenges and opportunities
  in medicines information
SO HEALTH POLICY
AB Purpose and setting: The Finnish Medicines Agency was mandated to develop a national medicines information strategy. The objectives of this study were to assess stakeholders' views on strengths, challenges and opportunities in medicines information for the basis of the strategy.
  Methods: Interviews among stakeholder representatives (n = 28) from patient organizations, universities, pharmacies, and professional associations in medicine, pharmacy and nursing were conducted in 2011. Interview memos were thematically content-analysed. The draft strategy was finalized through two public hearings and a public consultation.
  Results: Stakeholders highlighted the need to increase cooperation and coordination in medicines information. The existence of numerous quality- and evidence-based medicines information sources was identified as a strength; although the stakeholders were concerned about the fragmented and unequal access to them. The strengthening of the role of health care professionals in communicating about medicines was seen as an opportunity, but its realization requires improvements in basic and continuing education. Furthermore, the stakeholders emphasized the importance of uniform medicines information regardless of source.
  Conclusions: Stakeholders identified multiple strengths, challenges and opportunities in medicines information that were fundamental to developing the national medicines information strategy. An inventory of stakeholder perspectives can be recommended as a tool to support decision-making in pharmaceutical policy. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
TC 2
Z9 2
SN 0168-8510
PD JUL
PY 2013
VL 111
IS 2
BP 200
EP 205
DI 10.1016/j.healthpol.2013.04.005
UT WOS:000321938500012
PM 23683473
ER
 
PT J
AU Boyko, JA
  Lavis, JN
  Abelson, J
  Dobbins, M
  Carter, N
AF Boyko, Jennifer A.
  Lavis, John N.
  Abelson, Julia
  Dobbins, Maureen
  Carter, Nancy
TI Deliberative dialogues as a mechanism for knowledge translation and
  exchange in health systems decision-making
SO SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
AB Models that describe the key features and intended effects of specific knowledge translation and exchange (KTE) interventions are much less prominent than models that provide a more general understanding of KTE. Our aim was to develop a model in order to describe the key features and intended effects of deliberative dialogues used as a KTE strategy and to understand how deliberative dialogues can support evidence-informed policymaking. By using critical interpretive synthesis, we identified 17 papers representing four fields of enquiry and integrated our findings into a model. The key features described in the model are: 1) an appropriate (i.e., conducive to the particular dialogue) meeting environment; 2) an appropriate mix of participants; and, 3) an appropriate use of research evidence. These features combine to create three types of intended effects: 1) short-term individual-level; 3) medium-term community/organizational-level; and, 3) long-term system-level. The concept of capacity building helps to explain the relationship between features and effects. The model is a useful contribution to the KTE field because it is a practical tool that could be used to guide the development and evaluation of deliberative dialogues in order to understand more about achieving particular outcomes in relation to specific issues or contexts. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
RI Lavis, John/I-7555-2013
OI Lavis, John/0000-0001-7917-3657
TC 19
Z9 19
SN 0277-9536
PD DEC
PY 2012
VL 75
IS 11
BP 1938
EP 1945
DI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.06.016
UT WOS:000310385200004
PM 22938912
ER
 
PT J
AU Brown, C
AF Brown, Chris
TI The 'policy-preferences model': a new perspective on how researchers can
  facilitate the take-up of evidence by educational policy makers
SO EVIDENCE & POLICY
AB The phrase 'knowledge adoption refers to the often-complicated process by which policy makers 'take on board' evidence. While models have been put forward to explain this activity, this paper argues that such models are flawed and fail to fully address those complexities affecting the successful realisation of knowledge adoption efforts. Existing frameworks are examined, critiqued and an alternative, sociologically based approach presented. It is argued that this alternative conceptualisation provides a more effective account of the knowledge adoption process. The paper illustrates how this model has been tested and examines its implications for both research impact and evidence-informed policy making.
TC 4
Z9 4
SN 1744-2648
PD NOV
PY 2012
VL 8
IS 4
BP 455
EP 472
DI 10.1332/174426412X660106
UT WOS:000312415000004
ER
 
PT J
AU Bedard, PO
  Ouimet, M
AF Bedard, Pierre-Olivier
  Ouimet, Mathieu
TI Cognizance and Consultation of Randomized Controlled Trials among
  Ministerial Policy Analysts
SO REVIEW OF POLICY RESEARCH
AB Consultation of scientific evidence by policy actors has been the foci of attention of knowledge utilization scholars for decades. The present study questioned the extent to which randomized controlled trials (RCTs)generally seen as the gold standard of scientific researchare known and consulted by policy analysts in ministerial settings. Using cross-sectional data collected in 17 ministries in Quebec (Canada), our study showed that fairly high levels of policy analysts report never having heard of RCTs, thus possibly hindering effective communication of scientific results to relevant policy makers. Statistical analyses reveal the importance of cognitive factors in explaining both phenomena.
TC 7
Z9 7
SN 1541-132X
PD SEP
PY 2012
VL 29
IS 5
BP 625
EP 644
DI 10.1111/j.1541-1338.2012.00581.x
UT WOS:000307338500003
ER
 
PT J
AU Panisset, U
  Koehlmoos, TP
  Alkhatib, AH
  Pantoja, T
  Singh, P
  Kengey-Kayondo, J
  McCutchen, B
  Block, MAG
AF Panisset, Ulysses
  Koehlmoos, Tracey Perez
  Alkhatib, Ahmad Hamdi
  Pantoja, Tomas
  Singh, Prabal
  Kengey-Kayondo, Jane
  McCutchen, Ben
  Gonzalez Block, Miguel Angel
TI Implementation research evidence uptake and use for policy-making
SO HEALTH RESEARCH POLICY AND SYSTEMS
AB A major obstacle to the progress of the Millennium Development Goals has been the inability of health systems in many low- and middle-income countries to effectively implement evidence-informed interventions. This article discusses the relationships between implementation research and knowledge translation and identifies the role of implementation research in the design and execution of evidence-informed policy. After a discussion of the benefits and synergies needed to translate implementation research into action, the article discusses how implementation research can be used along the entire continuum of the use of evidence to inform policy. It provides specific examples of the use of implementation research in national level programmes by looking at the scale up of zinc for the treatment of childhood diarrhoea in Bangladesh and the scaling up of malaria treatment in Burkina Faso. A number of tested strategies to support the transfer of implementation research results into policy-making are provided to help meet the standards that are increasingly expected from evidence-informed policy-making practices.
TC 21
Z9 21
SN 1478-4505
PD JUL 2
PY 2012
VL 10
AR 20
DI 10.1186/1478-4505-10-20
UT WOS:000309213300001
PM 22748142
ER
 
PT J
AU Shine, KT
  Bartley, B
AF Shine, Kasey Treadwell
  Bartley, Brendan
TI Whose evidence base? The dynamic effects of ownership, receptivity and
  values on collaborative evidence-informed policy making
SO EVIDENCE & POLICY
AB This paper explores questions of ownership of and receptivity to research-based evidence and, in combination with often competing values, their effect on collaborative evidence-informed policy making (EIPM).We propose that these issues generate a 'dynamo' of push-pull factors for policy makers, researchers and research managers.Through the process of producing and managing new knowledge in collaborative EIPM efforts, these factors shape different 'realities'. We argue that these help to prevent, break, distort or facilitate the conceptual cycle of EIPM. The paper sets out ideas for mapping ownership, receptivity and values and their dynamic effects, drawn from actor network theory, complexity theory and the Competing Values Framework. In conclusion, it suggests that engagement with and development of policy making as a form of emergent ordering may provide ways for more effective EIPM.
TC 2
Z9 2
SN 1744-2648
PD NOV
PY 2011
VL 7
IS 4
BP 511
EP 530
DI 10.1332/17442641IX603489
UT WOS:000298439700007
ER
 
PT J
AU Sanderson, I
AF Sanderson, Ian
TI Intelligent Policy Making for a Complex World: Pragmatism, Evidence and
  Learning
SO POLITICAL STUDIES
AB The credentials of the evidence-based policy movement appear to be increasingly subject to challenge based on research that has highlighted the limits on the use of evidence in policy making. However, moves towards a more 'realistic' position of evidence-informed policy making risk conflating prescription with description and undermining a normative vision of better policy making. This article argues that we need to review the ideas that underpin our thinking about evidence-based policy making, and move beyond the territory of instrumental rationality to a position founded upon two intellectual pillars: our developing knowledge about complex adaptive systems; and ideas from a pragmatist philosophical position - especially those of John Dewey - about social scientific knowledge and its role in guiding action to address social problems. This leads us to a conception of 'intelligent policy making' in which the notion of policy learning is central.
TC 52
Z9 52
SN 0032-3217
PD DEC
PY 2009
VL 57
IS 4
BP 699
EP 719
DI 10.1111/j.1467-9248.2009.00791.x
UT WOS:000271496600001
ER
 
PT J
AU Wallace, A
  Croucher, K
  Bevan, M
  Jackson, K
  O'Malley, L
  Quilgars, D
AF Wallace, A
  Croucher, K
  Bevan, M
  Jackson, K
  O'Malley, L
  Quilgars, D
TI Evidence for policy making: Some reflections on the application of
  systematic reviews to housing research
SO HOUSING STUDIES
AB The recent turn towards evidence-based or evidence-informed policy making has generated interest in systematic literature review techniques. Systematic reviewing is increasingly being adopted to address questions in complex social policy areas, but the methodological development lags behind. Drawing on the experience of undertaking three systematic reviews of housing related topics, as part of a project designed to empirically test the transfer of systematic review methods to social policy and social care, this paper reflects on the use of the systematic review methods in housing research and considers how our experience accords with recent methodological development of reviewing in other areas. The paper first examines wider methodological developments occurring during the course of the three-year project, before considering changing review practices in housing studies. It then goes on to examine the key methodological challenges that remain unresolved, in particular: searching for literature, quality appraising studies, interpreting old research against shifting contextual factors, and providing an actual synthesis of diverse material. It calls for a more thoughtful approach to the method and more careful consideration of when systematic reviews may be appropriate.
TC 6
Z9 6
SN 0267-3037
PD MAR
PY 2006
VL 21
IS 2
BP 297
EP 314
DI 10.1080/02673030500484935
UT WOS:000236579200009
ER
 
EF
</pre>
}}


== Kirjallisuuskatsaus ==
== Kirjallisuuskatsaus ==

Versio 2. lokakuuta 2016 kello 07.02

Tiivistelmä

Tähän kootaan lyhyt 1-2 A4 pituinen tietokide

Nykytilanne

Päätösten läpinäkyvyys ja tietopohjaisuus ovat nousseet yhdeksi pääteemaksi niin hallinnon kuin tutkimuksenkin kentällä. Nykyiset tiedonjalostamisen käytännöt ovat hyviä ja lukuisiin muihin maihin verrattuna Suomessa jopa erinomaisia. Kun päätöstä aletaan valmistella, sovitaan tavoitteet, vastuut ja aikataulut ja työtä tekemään valitaan virkamiehet tai toimikunnat, jotka tuntevat asian hyvin. Tietoa työn tekemiseen on yleensä runsaasti. Tiedon runsaus ei kuitenkaan takaa päätösten perustuvan saatavilla olevaan tietoon.

Tutkimuslaitosten ja yliopistojen tuottaman tutkimustiedon rooli päätöksenteossa on merkittävä. Nykyiset toimintatavat eivät kuitenkaan tue saatavilla olevan tiedon hyödyntämistä. Prosessit perustuvat pitkälti toimijoiden omalla koneella tekemään työhön, suljettuihin toimikuntiin ja pieneen, helposti saatavilla olevaan osaan tiedosta.

Tietopohjaiseen päätöksentekoon ongelma ei siis tällä hetkellä ole tutkimustiedon puute. Ongelma on päätöksentekoprosessien avoimuuden ja osallistamisen puute sekä tiedon hajanaisuus.

Ehdotettu toimintapa

Edellä esitetyn ongelman ratkaisuna on pyrkiä päätösten valmistelussa jaettuun ymmärrykseen. Jaettu ymmärrys tarkoittaa tilannetta, jossa eri osapuolten näkemykset on kuvattu niin kattavasti, että on tiedossa, mistä päätökseen liittyvistä faktoista ja arvoista ollaan samaa mieltä, mistä eri mieltä ja miksi.

Jaetun ymmärryksen syntyminen edellyttää erityisesti avoimuutta, kohteellisuutta ja kritiikkiä. Näiden puute näyttää useimmiten liittyvän epäonnistumisiin jaetun ymmärryksen syntymisessä.

Avoimuuden, kohteellisuuden ja kritiikin laajamittainen onnistuminen vaatii verkkotyötila, johon kaikki asiaankuuluva tieto voidaan laittaa kaikkien nähtäville. Verkkotyötilan on myös sallittava avoin osallistuminen niin, että tieto ei hajoa tai vääristy. Verkkotyötilan lisäksi tarvitaan sopivat tietorakenteet ja toimintamallit, joiden avulla tieto pidetään järjestyksessä.

Tärkein menetelmä pitää tieto järjestyksessä on tunnistaa täsmällisiä kysymyksiä, joihin vastauksen löytäminen on tietotyön keskeisin tehtävä. Kysymysten on a) palveltava päätöksenteon tarpeita ja b) oltava tutkimuskysymyksiä eli sellaisia, joihin voidaan vastata tieteellisen tiedon avulla ja joiden vastausyrityksiä voi kritisoida tieteellisin perustein.

Tietokiteeksi kutsutaan sellaista tutkimuskysymyksen ympärille rakennettua tietojen kokonaisuutta, joka noudattaa avoimuuden, kohteellisuuden ja kritiikin periaatteita ja pyrkii jaettuun ymmärrykseen vastauksesta käyttäen havaintoaineistoja perusteluna. Tietokide onkin tässä työssä tunnistettu tärkeimmäksi tiedon jäsentämisen työkaluksi tai tieto-olioksi, joka ohjaa päätösvalmistelutyön etenemistä.

Ohjeita työhön

  • Avoin päätöksentekokäytäntö nykymuodossaan toimii työn pohjana.
  • Sisältää myös aiempia katsauksiamme päätöstukikirjallisuuteen.
  • Kirjallisuuskatsaus syksyllä 2015 (Arja A)
  • Vierailu The GovLabiin marraskuussa (Jouni)
  • Raimo mukaan keskusteluihin, jotta saadaan yhteiskuntatieteellinen näkökulma ja osaaminen.
  • Lyhyt ilmaisu ja kansantajuinen esitys. Esimerkkinä Design for Government. Joka työpaketista tuotetaan konkreettinen deliverable, joka on sisäänheittotuote ja markkinointiväline. Yksityiskohtaisempi työversio on Opasnetissä, ja tästä synteesistä pidetään kansantajuista meteliä ihmiskasvoin.
  • Myös teoreettisempaa keskustelua kaivataan: MIKSI TEHDÄÄN? Tämä johdannoksi.
  • Deliverable: “Miten tietoa pitäisi jäsentää jotta se tukisi päätöksentekoa?
  • Katsauksen tehtävänä on vastata näihin kysymyksiin:
    • mitä asiaa tarkastellaan ja mistä sen kuvaus löytyy (viite ja linkki)?
    • onko kyseessä teoreettinen viitekehys, toimintamalli vai tekninen työkalu? ----#: . Onko järkevä luokittelu? --Jouni Tuomisto (keskustelu) 22. syyskuuta 2015 kello 08.19 (UTC) (type: truth; paradigms: science: comment)
    • lyhyt kuvaus asiasta
    • miten tätä asiaa voisi hyödyntää valtioneuvoston tiedolla johtamisen kannalta ja mitä hyötyä siitä olisi
    • haasteita, ongelmia, mahdollisuuksia asian hyödyntämisessä
    • konkreettinen ehdotus miten asia sisällytetään sisäänajosuunnitelmaan jos mitenkään ja miksi. Vaihtoehtoja: otetaan käyttöön, otetaan muokattuna käyttöön, pidetään mielessä mutta ei hyödynnetä toistaiseksi, ei hyödynnetä. Tarvittaessa asia pilkotaan pienempiin osiin jotta saadaan seulottua käyttöön vain kaikkein parhaat ideat johdonmukaisesti.

Hakuja Web of Sciencesta

Decision making and knowledge production

Results: 65, 10 articles selected by hand

(from Web of Science Core Collection) You searched for: (TS=(decision making) OR TS=(policy)) AND TS=(knowledge production) Refined by: WEB OF SCIENCE CATEGORIES: ( ECONOMICS OR MANAGEMENT OR PLANNING DEVELOPMENT OR OPERATIONS RESEARCH MANAGEMENT SCIENCE OR SOCIOLOGY OR COMPUTER SCIENCE THEORY METHODS OR COMMUNICATION OR SOCIAL SCIENCES INTERDISCIPLINARY OR HISTORY PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE OR PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION OR MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES ) AND DOCUMENT TYPES: ( REVIEW OR EDITORIAL MATERIAL OR BOOK CHAPTER ) Timespan: All years. Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED, SSCI, A&HCI, ESCI.

FN Thomson Reuters Web of Science™ VR 1.0



Evidence-based policy

Results: 91, hand-picked 26

(from Web of Science Core Collection) You searched for: TS=("evidence-based policy") Refined by: DOCUMENT TYPES: ( REVIEW ) Timespan: All years. Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED, SSCI, A&HCI, ESCI.

FN Thomson Reuters Web of Science™ VR 1.0



Evidence-informed policy making

Results: 49, 24 articles selected by hand (from Web of Science Core Collection) You searched for: TOPIC: ("evidence-informed policy making")

FN Thomson Reuters Web of Science™ VR 1.0



Kirjallisuuskatsaus

Utiliry of openness in knowledge production 1-5

Openness and policy 1-2

Openness failure policy 1

Allintitle: openness failure 3/3

"Knowledge production" policy 1