| Literature DB >> 31295823 |
Paula Hooper1, Sarah Foster2, Billie Giles-Corti2.
Abstract
The translation of research into tangible health benefits via changes to urban planning policy and practice is a key intended outcome of academic active-living research endeavours. Conversely, policy-makers and planners identify the need for policy-specific evidence to ensure policy decisions and practices are informed and validated by rigorously established evidence. In practice, however, these two aspirations rarely meet and a research-translation gap remains. The RESIDE project is a unique longitudinal natural experiment designed to evaluate the health impacts of the 'Liveable Neighbourhoods' planning policy, which was introduced by the Western Australian Government to create more walkable suburbs. This commentary provides an overview and discussion of the policy-specific study methodologies undertaken to quantitatively assess the implementation of the policy and assess its active living and health impacts. It outlines the key research-translation successes and impact of the findings on the Liveable Neighbourhoods policy and discusses lessons learnt from the RESIDE project to inform future natural experiments of policy evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: Australia; active living; built environment; liveability; natural experiment; policy evaluation; urban design
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31295823 PMCID: PMC6678749 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16142448
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Criteria for assessing the policy-relevant research-translation efforts of the RESIDE project.
| Three Domains of Evidence-Based Policy [ | Strategies for Closing the Active-Living Research-Translation Gap [ |
|---|---|
|
Process—to understand approaches to enhance the likelihood of policy adoption. |
Understand the ‘policy world’ we want to change. Establish links and research agendas jointly with policy-makers and practitioners. Apply policy-relevant study designs (e.g., quantifying policy implementation) that evaluate policy reform. |
|
Content—to identify specific policy elements that are likely to be effective. |
Identify reasons for implementation (or non-implementation). |
|
Outcomes—to document the potential impact of policy. |
Quantifying policy impacts on health. Highlight specific policy implications. |
Figure 1Compliance scores on selected design requirements measured in 36 housing developments on-the-ground in 2009 and approved development applications in 2015. Top = on-ground 2009 (n = 36): ○ Small subdivision ≤60 hectare (n = 8); ● Large subdivision >60 hectares ≤100 hectares (n = 10); ● Structure plan >100 hectares ≤300 hectares (n = 5); ● Regional master plan >300 hectares (n = 13); Indicates the Liveable Neighbourhoods policy target for the respective design feature; Indicates the average level of compliance across the 36 housing developments.
Figure 2The ‘leaky pipe’ of the policy pipeline process for the Liveable Neighbourhoods Community Design policy in Perth, Western Australia.