| Literature DB >> 26573236 |
Daniel Wight1, Erica Wimbush2, Ruth Jepson3, Lawrence Doi3.
Abstract
Improving the effectiveness of public health interventions relies as much on the attention paid to their design and feasibility as to their evaluation. Yet, compared to the vast literature on how to evaluate interventions, there is little to guide researchers or practitioners on how best to develop such interventions in practical, logical, evidence based ways to maximise likely effectiveness. Existing models for the development of public health interventions tend to have a strong social-psychological, individual behaviour change orientation and some take years to implement. This paper presents a pragmatic guide to six essential Steps for Quality Intervention Development (6SQuID). The focus is on public health interventions but the model should have wider applicability. Once a problem has been identified as needing intervention, the process of designing an intervention can be broken down into six crucial steps: (1) defining and understanding the problem and its causes; (2) identifying which causal or contextual factors are modifiable: which have the greatest scope for change and who would benefit most; (3) deciding on the mechanisms of change; (4) clarifying how these will be delivered; (5) testing and adapting the intervention; and (6) collecting sufficient evidence of effectiveness to proceed to a rigorous evaluation. If each of these steps is carefully addressed, better use will be made of scarce public resources by avoiding the costly evaluation, or implementation, of unpromising interventions. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/Entities:
Keywords: GENDER; HEALTH PROMOTION; PREVENTION; PUBLIC HEALTH
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26573236 PMCID: PMC4853546 DOI: 10.1136/jech-2015-205952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epidemiol Community Health ISSN: 0143-005X Impact factor: 3.710
Existing frameworks and guidance for public health intervention development
| Guidance/framework | Description | Possible limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Intervention mapping | Extremely rigorous and elaborate approach to intervention development through six steps | Individual, social-psychological orientation. Highly technical, prescriptive, can require years to implement, difficult to operationalise |
| Conceptual framework for planning intervention-related research | Specifies nine steps in developing and evaluating public health interventions | Insufficient detail in steps for operationalising |
| PRECEDE–PROCEED model | Socioecological approach. Planning phase is PRECEDE; evaluation is PROCEED. Extensively data driven and practical application | May require great technical skill, time and money. Little detail on intervention development |
| Framework for design and evaluation of complex interventions to improve health. | Useful guide to development of interventions within the context of healthcare services | Focus on healthcare not public health. Little detail on intervention development |
| MRC guidance for the development and evaluation of Complex interventions | Identifies three broad stages of intervention development: developing theory, modelling process and outcomes and assessing feasibility | Does not break down three stages any further. Primarily devoted to evaluation |
| Design for behaviour change framework | For community development workers in low income countries. Focuses on determinants, facilitators and barriers to intended behaviour to plan behaviour change projects strategically | Sequence of steps advocated in part illogical and some of the terminology confusing |
Examples of interventions, mechanisms and outcomes at different levels
| Level | Interventions | Change mechanisms | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | Information provision; advertising | Resonance; perceived relevance; reading and reflection | Improving knowledge, motivation/intentions |
| Interpersonal | Counselling; peer education | Modelling; influence of reference group; mentorship | Improving motivation/intentions; developing skills/self-efficacy |
| Community | Walking group; food co-operation; neighbourhood watch | Solidarity; diffusion of innovation; changing community norms | Improving motivation/intentions, physical activity, diet, sense of security |
| Organisational | Institutional policies; quality standards; partnership working | Authorisation; inspection; enforcement; increasing staff awareness | Reducing discrimination; improving services |
| Environmental | Clean air legislation; piped water; housing regulations; safe cycling and walking infrastructure | Legislation; enforcement; redesign of services; ‘choice architecture’ | Environmental improvements; healthier housing; more physical activity |
| Macro policy | Poverty reduction; redistribution of resources; education; controlling corporations | Legislation and enforcement; economic security and choices | Healthy lifestyles more affordable and given higher priority |
Figure 1Causal pathways perpetuating gender-based violence.21–26
| Case study step 1: Understanding the problem of GBV and its causes | |
|---|---|
| Questions | Answers |
| Nature and extent of main problem | |
| What is the nature and extent of problem? | 1 in 3 women likely to experience GBV |
| For whom and at what levels does problem exist? | Predominantly affects girls and women. Problem perpetuated at different socioecological levels |
| What is the history? | Embedded in long-established patriarchal institutions and norms but these are weakening with improved education, employment and rights for women |
| Causes and contributing factors | |
| What are its causes? | |
| Which causes are most important? (see case study step 2) | Poor attachment and parental bonding; harsh parenting; witnessing parental conflict |
| What has been effective in addressing problem? | Early years parenting programmes; relationship counselling; mediation; empowering women educationally and economically; changed norms; legislation |
| Consequences | |
| What are the consequences for those directly affected? | |
| What are the consequences for those indirectly affected? | Those witnessing more likely to become victims or perpetrators; family break-up; burden on health services; women unable to fulfil potential |
| Case study step 2: Modifiable familial factors shaping GBV | |
|---|---|
| Factor | Evidence modifiable |
| 1. Poor attachment and parental bonding | Effective early years parenting programmes; historical change |
| 2. Harsh parenting | ditto |
| 3. Socialisation into inequitable gender roles and norms | Historical change |
| 4. Parental conflict | Effective relationship counselling and mediation; historical change |
| Case study step 3: Change mechanisms for early prevention of GBV (interpersonal level only) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Modifiable factors | Change mechanisms | Is this sufficient to reduce the problem? |
| 1. Poor attachment and parental bonding | Explaining infant development and parent–child interactions | Probably |
| 2. Harsh parenting | Praising and reinforcing parents’ techniques of positive parenting | Not if poor attachment |
| 3. Socialisation into inequitable gender roles and norms | Raising awareness of gender issues and discussing between couples | Not if poor attachment and harsh parenting impair emotional control |
| 4. Parental conflict | Understanding impact of parental conflict on child development and well-being | Probably |
| Case study step 4: Delivering change mechanisms for early prevention of GBV |
|---|
| 1. Identify suitable villages or urban wards |
| 2. Explain programme and offer it to community leadership: awareness raising critical |
| 3. Recruit existing groups or ‘opinion leaders’ and form parent groups |
| ▸ initially single sex |
| ▸ groups select facilitator |
| 4. Deliver 2 weeks training to facilitators |
| 5. Facilitators lead 10 weekly single sex sessions of about 2 h |
| 6. Following five sessions facilitators recruit novice facilitator to mentor |
| 7. After 10 sessions groups split in half and pair up with group of opposite sex |
| 8. Facilitators lead 11 mixed sex sessions |
| ▸ groups explore different understandings of parenting and GBV |
| 9. Groups present recommendations for village/ward level to village/ward leaders |
| 10. Trained facilitators start new groups and recruit others to be trained as facilitators |
| Case study step 5: Testing and adapting programme for early prevention of GBV |
|---|
| ▸ Negotiate access to village and recruit one mothers and one fathers group |
| ▸ Recruit and train two facilitators from each group |
| ▸ Pilot draft manual with groups with observational research |
| ▸ Revise problematic sessions as necessary and test again (if necessary several times) |
| ▸ Conduct group discussions with each group and in-depth interviews with facilitators to explore views on intervention |
| ▸ Finalise first draft of manual |
| ▸ Repeat process in second village with two mothers and two fathers groups to produce second draft of manual |
| Case study step 6: Collecting evidence of effectiveness of programme for early prevention of GBV. |
|---|
| ▸ Baseline survey of parent and 10–14-year-old child dyads in two communities to measure: attitudes to GBV, parent–child relationships, parent–parent relationships, etc |
| ▸ Implement intervention with 10 different groups |
| ▸ Observe 10% of sessions to assess fidelity |
| ▸ Group discussions and semistructured interviews with participants to assess their characteristics, recruitment processes, group functioning and requirements for facilitators |
| ▸ Follow-up survey, ideally with the same respondents |