| Literature DB >> 27362932 |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Since the 1990s, the use of health impact assessments (HIAs) has grown for considering the potential health impacts of proposed policies, plans, programs, and projects in various sectors. Evaluation of HIA impacts is needed for understanding the value of HIAs, improving the methods involved in HIAs, and potentially expanding their application. Impact evaluations examine whether HIAs affect decisions and lead to other effects.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27362932 PMCID: PMC4951082 DOI: 10.5888/pcd13.150559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Characteristics of 5 Major Health Impact Assessment (HIA) Impact Evaluation Reports, United States, Europe, Australia and New Zealand, 2006–2015
| Characteristic | Davenport et al, 2006 ( | Wismar et al, 2007 ( | Rhodus et al, 2013 ( | Haigh et al, 2015 ( | Bourcier et al, 2015 ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Organization | University of Birmingham, United Kingdom | European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, Brussels, Belgium | US Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio | University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia | Group Health Research Institute, Seattle, Washington |
| Source of HIAs | Primarily Europe (85 of 88 HIAs [97%]) | Europe: 19 countries | United States | Australia and New Zealand | United States |
| Years of HIAs reviewed | 1996–2004 | 2002–2006 | 2005–2012 | 2005–2009 | 2005–2013 |
| Sampling strategy | All HIAs found on multiple Web-based databases as of 2004 | Purposely selected from list of 158 European HIAs completed or ongoing as of 2005 to “have some potential for effectiveness” | Used multiple databases of US HIAs completed as of spring 2012; chose all HIAs in 4 sectors related to agency mission | Purposely selected from among 55 Australia/New Zealand HIAs completed by 2009 to reflect willingness to participate and diversity in timing, geography, and effectiveness | Purposely selected from among all US HIAs completed as of 2013 for diversity in geography, sector, funding; subjectively successful |
| No. of HIAs reviewed | 88 | 17 case studies, of which 8 were not HIAs as strictly defined | 81 | 11 | 23 |
| Level of decision making | Local or regional, 83; national, 4; supranational, 1 | Local, 10; national, 6; multinational, 1 | Local or county 63; state 13; national 4; unclear 1 | Local or regional, 11 | Local or regional, 17; state, 6 |
| Sector | Transportation, 16; housing, 12; regeneration, 11; health care, 11; environment, 7; leisure, 7; industry, 5; other, 19 | Transportation, 5; urban planning, 5; agriculture, 2; environment, 2; industry, 1; infrastructure, 1; nutrition, 1 | Land use, 39; transportation, 21; housing/buildings/infrastructure, 17; waste management/site revitalization, 4 | Land use, 7; health service, 2; housing, 1; transportation, 1 | Built environment, 11; transportation, 3; natural resources/energy, 3; other, 6 |
| Review methods | Reviewed 88 case studies and 32 HIA methods papers; conducted email survey of 10 academicians, practitioners, and policy makers | Worked with collaborators in each country to examine dimensions of effectiveness in case studies; included 3–6 interviews with stakeholders and decision makers for each HIA | Reviewed HIA reports; used minimum elements of HIA as defined by Bhatia et al ( | Reviewed HIA reports and questionnaires completed by HIA practitioners; conducted 33 semistructured interviews with HIA stakeholders | Reviewed HIA reports; conducted 166 semistructured interviews with HIA team members, stakeholders, and decision makers; conducted Web survey of 144 HIA practitioners |
Findings and Impacts of 5 Major Health Impact Assessment (HIA) Impact Evaluation Reports, United States, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, 2006–2015
| Author and Year of Publication | Findings and Impacts |
|---|---|
| Davenport et al 2006 ( |
Important to monitor decisions to determine if impact occurred Engaging decision makers is important but may compromise independence and impartiality HIAs need to fit into the political and administrative environment in which they are being conducted; this fit may be as important as the technical methods used to conduct the HIA |
| Wismar et al, 2007 ( |
Described wide range of HIA methods used in 19 European countries Reported that some complex projects entail a large number of discrete decisions, so effectiveness may vary with different decisions Reported that none of the HIAs reviewed led to complete cancellation of a project
Defined 4-cell framework for overall effectiveness as direct, general, opportunistic, and none Identified dimensions of effectiveness as health effectiveness, equity effectiveness, and community effectiveness |
| Rhodus et al, 2013 ( |
Raised awareness of health and related issues Introduced health into discussions where health was typically absent (ie, informing decision making) Engaged community members and stakeholders in decisions that affect them Facilitated interdepartmental, interagency, and intersectoral collaborations Built relationships and capacity within the community For 50 of 81 HIAs for which impacts could be ascertained, effectiveness ( Only 13 of 81 HIAs (16%) met all the minimum elements as defined by Bhatia et al ( |
| Haigh et al, 2015 ( |
91% of survey respondents reported that the HIA affected decision making 83% of those with HIA impacts reported that HIA recommendations were easily incorporated into planning process No respondent indicated that the HIA led to proposal postponement or cancellation Some HIAs influenced implementation of proposal after a decision was made Some HIAs helped legitimize involvement of the health sector in nonhealth sector decisions Many HIA participants reported technical, conceptual, and social learning from the HIA process
Findings generally supported Harris-Roxas and Harris ( The authors found Wismar’s 4-cell effectiveness framework (
Introduced concept of “proactive positioning” to recognize or create opportunities for conducting HIAs |
| Bourcier et al, 2015 ( |
48% of decision makers reported HIA shaped their decision making Made direct and concrete contributions from the recommendations to the decision-making process Facilitated incorporation of health objectives into plans, policies, and programs of nonhealth-related agencies Contributed to longer-term outcomes beyond initial decision targets Institutionalized or strengthened existing relationships between individuals and organizations, or created new and enduring relationships between public health and other agencies such as transportation or planning departments Helped decision makers and stakeholders see how health is connected to seemingly unconnected issues Built consensus around controversial topics Amplified community member voices in the decision-making process |
Success Factors in 5 Major Health Impact Assessment (HIA) Impact Evaluation Reports, United States, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, 2006–2015
| Author and Year of Publication | Success Factors |
|---|---|
| Davenport et al 2006 ( | Involvement of decision makers/key stakeholders in the planning and conduct of the HIA (for example, commissioning, steering group, formulation of recommendations) Input from professionals outside of the usual range of people involved in the decision-making process Balance between decision maker ownership and HIA credibility
Clear commitment to HIA within organizational decision-making structure Not being a controversial issue Policy support for HIAs (including supporting legislation, promotion of consistency of methods, monitoring, and evaluation) Provision of an enabling structure for HIA (manpower, evidence base, and intersectoral working) Existing statutory frameworks supporting the use of HIAs Recommendations chime with other political drivers Recommendations realistic and can be incorporated into the existing planning process
Timing of assessment should fit with the decision-making process HIAs need to fit with decision makers’ rules, procedures, and time frames
Use of a consistent methodological approach Consideration of a broad range of factors that can have an impact on community health and safety Inclusion of empirical evidence relating the effects of a policy, program, or project on health Quantification of impacts Conduct by expert assessors (credibility of results)
Tailored presentation of information Use insight into organizational concerns and priorities to shape recommendations |
| Wismar et al, 2007 ( |
Capacity to deal with community pressure Timing in relation to the decision-making process Involvement of organizations that can support conduct of the HIA Culture of public health in the country Political leadership Public support Involvement in early stage of proposal development Legal backup for using health determinants in assessment Creation of health systems units to support HIA Clarification of who bears costs of HIA |
| Rhodus et al, 2013 ( | Adherence to minimum elements of HIA as defined by Bhatia et al ( Use of HIA as a tool for environmental impact assessment Promotion of health equity Documentation of screening and scoping Rules of engagement memos Communication plans Stakeholder involvement Transparent documentation of literature searches/reviews Use of best available qualitative and quantitative data Evaluation of quality of evidence Identification of data gaps Use of existing tools, metrics, methods, and standards Adaptation of existing tools and methods Detailed documentation of data and methods Use of geographic information systems Use of impact pathways and logic frameworks Clear summary of impact assessments Confidence estimates and assessments of uncertainty Documentation of process for prioritizing recommendations Recommendations that meet established feasibility criteria Development of an implementation plan for recommendations Clear and transparent HIA reporting Process evaluation Establishment of monitoring plans for impact and outcome evaluation |
| Haigh et al, 2015 ( |
Use of a structured stepwise process Flexibility to adapt process to local context Use of evidence to support recommendations Capacity and experience among practitioners and stakeholders Involvement of decision makers and others who can influence decisions or implement recommendations High-quality relationships across sectors Engagement of community stakeholders Shared goals and values among HIA participants Use of “proactive positioning” to achieve optimal timing Flexibility in time and timeliness to conduct HIA |
| Bourcier et al, 2015 ( |
Method of screening and choosing HIA targets wisely because an HIA is not always the right tool Investment in the right team to conduct HIA Engagement of key stakeholders Engagement of decision makers throughout the process Development of clearly articulated recommendations that spark action Delivery of compelling messages to the right audiences at the right times Use of approach to take advantage of HIA credibility |
Challenges in 5 Major Health Impact Assessment (HIA) Impact Evaluation Reports, United States, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, 2006–2015
| Author and Year of Publication | Challenges |
|---|---|
| Davenport et al, 2006 ( | Limited organizational unique HIA conducted by champions external to the decision-making organization Not having the support of decision makers
Lack of awareness of health issues by nonhealth-related sectors Lack of knowledge (on behalf of those conducting HIA) of the policy-making environment HIA not a statutory or policy requirement
Lack of an established standard method for conducting an HIA Time, resources, and staffing Use of jargon |
| Wismar et al, 2007 ( |
HIA timing Quality of communication among stakeholders Quality of HIA predictions Conflicting objectives between health and other sectors in which HIA is done Links among local, national, and international decision making Lack of institutionalization of HIAs Uneven development of HIAs across countries |
| Rhodus et al, 2013 ( |
Ability to discern impact of HIAs on decision-making processes by Internet searches is limited
Increase adherence to the minimum elements of HIA as defined by Bhatia et al ( Expand use of HIA to inform decision making at local, state, and national levels Use consistency in HIA terminology Expand use of existing tools and resources for HIAs Identify and close data gaps |
| Haigh et al, 2015 ( |
Dealing with problem makers and proposal opponents Responding to unanticipated events such as change in decision maker Identifying effectiveness when goals of HIA were not explicit |
| Bourcier et al, 2015 ( |
Underestimation of overall level of effort Engagement of stakeholders and decision makers Pace of decision making and political administration changes Lack of access to relevant data Incorporation of equity and vulnerable populations consistently and meaningfully Follow-up on recommendations |
Impact Evaluations of Selected Individual Health Impact Assessments (HIAs) in Various Countries, 2004–2013
| Author and Year of Publication | Name and Location of HIA | Sector | Example of HIA Recommendation Adopted in Final Project or Plan | Selected Feature, Finding, or Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mindell et al, 2004 ( | London’s draft transport strategy HIA, United Kingdom | Transportation | Giving priority to infrastructure and services that benefit London’s economically deprived communities | Achieved policy changes and raised awareness of health issues among policy makers |
| Mathias and Harris-Roxas, 2009 ( | Christchurch Urban Development Strategy HIA, New Zealand | Land use | 17 actions (not specified) in final strategy addressed HIA recommendations | Included process and impact evaluation; strong cross-sector relationships contributed to HIA success |
| Quigley and Watts, Ltd, 2010 ( | Evaluation of the Whānau Ora HIA of the Draft Wairarapa Alcohol Strategy, New Zealand | Alcohol policy | HIA recommendations led to revisions of draft strategy | Public health team conducting HIA increased its knowledge and skills with HIA |
| Clark County, 2011 ( | Clark County Bicycle and Pedestrian Master Plan HIA, Clark County, Washington | Transportation | Health and equity incorporated as project selection criteria | Of 11 HIA recommendations, 8 were fully adopted and 3 partially adopted |
| Harris-Roxas et al, 2011 ( | Equity-focused HIA on health promotion policy implementation plan, New South Wales, Australia | Health promotion policy | Change in resource allocation split between rural and urban services | Focused on equity aspects of a health-sector plan |
| Ross et al, 2012 ( | Atlanta BeltLine transit, parks, and redevelopment project HIA, Atlanta, Georgia | Land use and transportation | Public health professional added to project advisory board | Explicitly tied findings to recommendations and to subsequent impacts |
| O’Mullane and Quinlivan, 2012 ( | Four policy HIAs on transport, housing, community development, air quality plan, Ireland | Multiple sectors | Transport HIA “was used to plan further health promotion and community planning activities” | Found local government can be an enabler or barrier to success of HIA |
| Canterbury District Health Board, 2013 ( | Evaluation of the HIA of the Canterbury Regional Land Transport Strategy, New Zealand | Transportation | Committing future funding to policies supporting active transport and public transport | Noted that HIA report recommendations did not include effective monitoring for health issues |