| Literature DB >> 22412153 |
Helen Roberts1, Mark Petticrew, Kristin Liabo, Sally Macintyre.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There appears to be considerable variation between different national jurisdictions and between different sectors of public policy in the use of evidence and particularly the use of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) to evaluate non-healthcare sector programmes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22412153 PMCID: PMC3465834 DOI: 10.1136/jech-2011-200313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epidemiol Community Health ISSN: 0143-005X Impact factor: 3.710
Barriers to and facilitators of social policy trials identified with interviewees
| Levers | Barriers |
| Personal contacts/researcher policy contact/serendipity | Poor communication by researchers; ambivalence/hostility by researchers and research brokers |
| Potential for good cost-benefit information | |
| Independence of evaluators from policy/politicians | Problems if policy initiative to which politicians have committed themselves shown not to work |
| Funding for new initiatives tied to good trial evidence/accountability | Cost/complexity of running a trial |
| Advocacy by those whose trials have shown an effect in other countries | Ambivalence/hostility by some researchers and research brokers |
| Good dissemination skills by trialists; willingness to avoid too many caveats when presenting results | Over-enthusiasm by some trial proponents |
| A lot of good research on what the problems are; less on what to do about them | Pejorative use of term ‘experimentation’ |
| Convincing trial welcome to politicians | Lack of high-quality trial applications |
| Support from key government departments (eg, Treasury) | Moral and ethical concerns/equipoise |
| Lack of researcher experience in social policy trials | |
| Recruitment problems | |
| Timing (in relation to policy development)/political desire to get things up and running quickly | |
| RCTs more suited to clinical research | |
| The line of least resistance not to carry them out | |
| Culture of advocacy, case study, precedent and anecdote |
RCTs, randomised controlled trials.