Translating research findings into health policy
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Cited by (170)
Translating Research into Child Health Policy: Aligning Incentives and Building a New Discourse
2023, Pediatric Clinics of North AmericaCitation Excerpt :Raising the quality of the debate about health issues to include scholarly evidence as well as anecdotes and biases.5 The worlds of research and health policy often have challenges talking to each other, however, as research findings are not easily accessed by policy makers and are additionally laden with technical jargon, complex statistical models, and associations rather than the clear cause and effect conclusions with specific policy recommendations.6 There are examples in the last few decades of translating research into public policy in the pediatric space, including research demonstrating the association of infants safe sleeping and suddent infant death syndrome (SIDS) deaths which launched the “back to sleep” campaign.
Guidelines rarely used GRADE and applied methods inconsistently: A methodological study of Australian guidelines
2021, Journal of Clinical EpidemiologyThe COVID-19 outbreak in Sri Lanka: A synoptic analysis focusing on trends, impacts, risks and science-policy interaction processes
2020, Progress in Disaster ScienceKnowledge and power in policy-making for child survival in Niger
2017, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :To date, nearly all African countries have adopted some form of iCCM policy (Rasanathan et al., 2014). In recent years, calls have increased to move toward evidence-informed decision-making in global health and public policy following observations in the 1990s and 2000s that policies did not reflect evidence as much as they could and that stores of useful research were going to waste (Davis and Howden-Chapman, 1996; Hanney et al., 2003; Lavis et al., 2002). Concurrently, new directions are emerging in the types of knowledge considered relevant to health policy making, with a growing consensus that earlier conceptions of evidence, defined “statistical inference about events in populations that are studied prospectively,” were too narrow and should be expanded to include observational and qualitative studies and health policy and systems research (HPSR) (Black, 2001; Fox, 2005; Sturm, 2002).
Fighting dementia in Europe: The time to act is now
2016, The Lancet NeurologyHe Kāinga Oranga: reflections on 25 years of measuring the improved health, wellbeing and sustainability of healthier housing
2024, Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand