| Literature DB >> 26264351 |
Andrew J Milat1,2, Adrian Bauman3, Sally Redman4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To maximise the impact of public health research, research interventions found to be effective in improving health need to be scaled up and delivered on a population-wide basis. Theoretical frameworks and approaches are useful for describing and understanding how effective interventions are scaled up from small trials into broader policy and practice and can be used as a tool to facilitate effective scale-up. The purpose of this literature review was to synthesise evidence on scaling up public health interventions into population-wide policy and practice, with a focus on the defining and describing frameworks, processes and methods of scaling up public health initiatives.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26264351 PMCID: PMC4533941 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0301-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Study designs, review search terms and databases used in the literature review of scaling up public health action
| Study descriptions | Review search terms | Review databases |
|---|---|---|
| Theoretical and opinion pieces | Scaling up OR | MEDLINE (general medicine) |
| Scalability OR | CINAHL (nursing and allied health) | |
| Case studies | Intervention research OR | |
| Translational research OR | EBM reviews—Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2005 to December 2013 | |
| Descriptive studies | Research dissemination OR | |
| Intervention studies | Health promotion AND | |
| Frameworks | Public health AND | |
| PsycINFO (psychology and related behavioural and social sciences) | ||
| Systematic reviews | ||
| Google Scholar |
Fig. 1Literature search process and numbers of papers identified, excluded and included in the review of increasing the scale of public health interventions
Synthesis of public health scaling up models and frameworks
| Model/framework | Key components | Focus area | Process of development | Context | Bibliographic references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scalability considerations | Scalability with a focus on the following: | Health promotion: generic | Literature review and expert Delphi process | High-income country | [ |
| ➢ Effectiveness | |||||
| ➢ Reach and adoption | |||||
| ➢ Human, technical and organisational Resources | |||||
| ➢ Costs | |||||
| ➢ Intervention delivery | |||||
| ➢ Contextual factors | |||||
| ➢ Appropriate evaluation approaches | |||||
| Scaling up population health interventions: guide, New South Wales Ministry of Health | A 4-step process for scaling up interventions: | Public health: generic | Literature review and expert Delphi process | High-income country | [ |
| ➢ Step 1. Scalability assessment: to assess the suitability of the intervention/s for scaling up | |||||
| ➢ Step 2. Develop a scaling up plan: create a vision of what scaling up will look like and a compelling case for action | |||||
| ➢ Step 3. Prepare for scaling up: securing resources and building a foundation of legitimacy and support for the scaling up plan | |||||
| ➢ Step 4. Scale up: the main tasks that should be addressed during scale up | |||||
| 9 steps to scaling up, WHO ExpandNet | ExpandNet framework involves 9 steps: | Health services and public health: generic | Literature review and interviews | Global health | [ |
| ➢ Planning actions to increase the scalability of the innovation | |||||
| ➢ Increasing the capacity of the user organisation to implement | |||||
| ➢ Assessing the environment and planning actions to increase the potential for success | |||||
| ➢ Increasing the capacity of the resource team to support scaling up | |||||
| ➢ Making strategic choices to support vertical scaling up (institutionalisation) | |||||
| ➢ Making strategic choices to support horizontal scaling up (expansion/replication) | |||||
| ➢ Determining the role of diversification | |||||
| ➢ Planning actions to address spontaneous scaling up | |||||
| ➢ Finalising the scaling-up strategy and identifying next steps | |||||
| Scaling up management (SUM) framework | Includes 3 key steps: | Health services and public health: generic | Literature and interviews | Global health | [ |
| ➢ Step 1: developing a scaling up plan | |||||
| ➢ Step 2: establishing the preconditions for scaling up | |||||
| ➢ Step 3: implementing the scaling up process based on the identification of factors that can promote extension and sustainability | |||||
| Scale up of exclusive breastfeeding | Involves the following steps: | Health services and public health: breastfeeding | Systematic review | Global health | [ |
| ➢ Assess situation, create a policy environment conducive to action | |||||
| ➢ Define roles, relationships and responsibilities of all partners | |||||
| ➢ Establish agreements | |||||
| ➢ Review technical support | |||||
| ➢ Define programme strategy | |||||
| ➢ Mobilise resources | |||||
| ➢ Provide training and technical assistance | |||||
| ➢ Develop and use monitoring and evaluation systems | |||||
| ➢ Monitor coverage and quality | |||||
| ➢ Measure impact and cost | |||||
| ➢ Provide for testing novel approaches and continuing innovation | |||||
| Scaling up global health interventions: framework for success | Describes 6 components of the scaling up process: | Health services and public health | Literature review and interviews with experts | Global health | [ |
| ➢ Attributes of the specific tool or service being scaled up | |||||
| ➢ Attributes of the implementers | |||||
| ➢ Chosen delivery strategy | |||||
| ➢ Attributes of the ‘adopting’ community | |||||
| ➢ Socio-political context and research context | |||||
| Breastfeeding gear model | Eight interrelated elements: | Health services and public health | Literature review, interviews and focus groups | Global health | [ |
| ➢ Advocacy | |||||
| ➢ Political will | |||||
| ➢ Legislation and policies | |||||
| ➢ Funding and resources | |||||
| ➢ Training and delivery | |||||
| ➢ Promotion | |||||
| ➢ Research and evaluation | |||||
| ➢ Coordination and goals monitoring | |||||
| The framework suggests successful multiple feedback loops and several potential paths are required to achieve intended innovation |
Synthesis of success factors and barriers to scaling up public health interventions in rank order of mentions
| Success factors | Bibliographic references |
| Establishing monitoring and evaluation systems | [ |
| Costing and economic modelling of intervention approaches | [ |
| Active engagement of a range of implementers and the target community | [ |
| Tailoring scale-up approach to local context and use of participatory approaches | [ |
| Systematic use of evidence | [ |
| Infrastructure to support implementation such as training, delivery systems, technical resources | [ |
| Strong leadership and champions | [ |
| Political will | [ |
| Well-defined scale-up strategy | [ |
| Strong advocacy | [ |
| Flexible responses to human resource constraints | [ |
| Formative research to ensure appropriate intervention design | [ |
| Equity of intervention delivery and monitoring intended and unintended consequences across socio-demographic profiles | [ |
| Effective communication strategy | [ |
| Effective governance and coordination | [ |
| Clear role definition and delineation | [ |
| Keeping the intervention model simple | [ |
| Financing models | [ |
| Programmes are visible, publicised and effectively packaged | [ |
| Developing strategies for integration into existing services | [ |
| Barriers | |
| Not adapting intervention approaches to the local context | [ |
| Intervention costs and other economic factors | [ |
| Lack of human resources | [ |
| Resistance to the introduction of new practices due to capacity constraints | [ |
| Insufficient investment in implementation infrastructure including training, monitoring and evaluation systems | [ |
| Staff recruitment and staff turnover | [ |
| Lack of political will | [ |
| Traditional research funding processes are not flexible enough to support evaluation of scale up | [ |
| Leadership changes amongst implementation agencies | [ |
| Poor engagement with stakeholders and thought leaders | [ |
| Poor role delineation | [ |
| Maintaining quality and consistency of health interventions at scale [ | [ |