| Literature DB >> 27067540 |
Chinyere O Mbachu1, Obinna Onwujekwe2,3, Ifeanyi Chikezie2, Nkoli Ezumah2,4, Mahua Das5, Benjamin S C Uzochukwu2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence-informed policymaking has been promoted as a means of ensuring better outcomes. However, what counts as evidence in policymaking lies within a spectrum of expert knowledge and scientifically generated information. Since not all forms of evidence share an equal validity or weighting for policymakers, it is important to understand the key factors that influence their preferences for different types of evidence in policy and strategy development.Entities:
Keywords: Actors; Evidence; Nigeria; Policymaking; Preference
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27067540 PMCID: PMC4828804 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-016-0098-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Fig. 1Conceptual framework for analysing key influences over policy actors’ preference for and use of evidence in policy development [16]
Types of actors involved in developing the Integrated Maternal Newborn and Child Health (IMNCH) strategy and their roles
| Actor categories | Types of actors involved | Roles in strategy development |
|---|---|---|
| Public policymakers and government officials | 1) High level government officials in the Federal Ministry of Health such as: | • Mandate to make policies (directional power) |
| - Permanent secretary | • Endorsement and approval of policies | |
| - Deputy Director of Reproductive Health | ||
| - Director of Planning, Research and Statistics | ||
| 2) Political office holders such as: | ||
| - Minister for Health | ||
| 3) Approval bodies such as: | ||
| - National Council on Health (NCoH) | ||
| -Federal executive council (FEC) | ||
| - Legislators | ||
| Development partners and donor agencies | United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) | • Provided technical assistance/input – advise and inform policymakers on options, their alternatives and the resultant effects |
| World Health Organization (WHO) | ||
| United Nation Fund for Population (UNFPA) | • Funded major aspects of the policy development | |
| Partnership for Maternal and Child Health (PMNCH) | ||
| Professional groups | Society for Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Nigeria (SOGON) | Technical inputs through membership of technical working groups for developing the IMNCH strategya |
| Conference of Paediatricians Association of Nigeria (PANCOF) | ||
| National Association of Nurses and Midwives (NANM) | ||
| Non-government organisations/civil society organisations | Management Sciences for Health (MSH) | Advocacy and lobbying for inclusion of priority maternal and child health needs on the policy agenda and equitable distribution of resources and services |
| UN Committee on Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) | ||
| UN Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) |
aAlthough majority of the key informants had this opinion, one key informant differed (Details are in description of Table 1 in the text)
Role of actors in evidence process (generation, dissemination and use) for the Integrated Maternal Newborn and Child Health (IMNCH) strategy
| Actor types | Roles in evidence generation | Roles in evidence dissemination | Roles in evidence use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Public policymakers and government officials | Supervised the collation of evidence from surveys (DHS) and for the situation analysis (SITAN) | Distributed survey and SITAN reports to other stakeholders | Used all available evidence to: |
| 1) justify the need for IMNCH strategy | |||
| 2) determine interventions to be included in the strategy | |||
| Development partners and donor agencies | Funding and technical support for: | Distributed MBB tool and Lancet series to public policymakers and technical experts/consultants | No clearly stated role in evidence use |
| 1) situation analysis (SITAN) and DHS | |||
| 2) developing the marginal budgeting for bottleneck (MBB) tool | Provided funding to the Federal Ministry of Health to assist in evidence dissemination | ||
| Recommended the Lancet series on low-cost effective interventions for maternal and child health (MCH) | |||
| Professional groups as members of technical working group | Scoped for and collated published research articles and unpublished technical reports of maternal and child mortality and evaluation of MCH interventions | No stated role in disseminating evidence for the IMNCH strategy | Decided on which evidence was relevant and appropriate for developing the strategy |
| Non-government organisations/civil society organisations | No stated role in the whole evidence process | ||
Respondents’ perception of actors’ capacity to influence the Integrated Maternal Newborn and Child Health (IMNCH) strategy development
| Types of actors | Types and levels of actors’ influence on the IMNCH strategy development | Types of influence | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Directional | Funding | Technical/Advisory | Discretionary/Implementation | Advocacy | ||
| Public policy elites and Government officials | High | Medium | Medium | Low | Low | Levels of influence |
| Development partners and funders | Low | High | High | Low | Low | |
| Academia | Low | Low | High | Low | Low | |
| Professionals and health workers | Low | Low | Low | High | Medium | |
| Civil society organisations/ Non-governmental organisations | Low | Low | Medium | Low | High | |
Perception of contextual influence on evidence use for the Integrated Maternal Newborn and Child Health (IMNCH) strategy
| Contextual factors | Influence on evidence use for developing the IMNCH strategy |
|---|---|
| Limited resources – finance, human, infrastructure | Choice of evidence of low-cost interventions |
| Use of evidence that was promoted by funders of the strategy development and aspects of its implementation | |
| Poor coverage of maternal and child health (MCH) services, health system constraints and operational challenges | Marginal budgeting for bottleneck approach was used to systematically identify health system constraints to MCH and operational strategies for overcoming them |
| Existing child health policy without a comprehensive plan of action for implementation | Underpins the need for a strategy document |
| Preference for evidence that would support the policy and its implementation | |
| Need to align country’s activities to global movement | Underpins the decision to develop the strategy |
| High (sustained) maternal and child mortality rates | Underpin need for strategy change |
| High impact interventions | |
| Slow progress towards attaining Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 | Underpins the choice of evidence of high-impact interventions |
| Limited time to produce strategy with Limited actor engagement and information/evidence gathering | Preference for and use of already existing and easily accessible evidence |