Abstract

For more than 30 years, the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy has been conducting research and evaluation to provide timely and critical evidence to answer real-world policy questions. Our experienced team of research scientists, analysts and other staff work extensively with policy-makers at the macro, meso and micro levels of government to support evidence-informed policy and program development in an effort to ensure that policy initiatives provide the greatest benefit possible to individuals and society as a whole. Using the widely recognized whole-population Manitoba Population Research Data Repository, which comprises approximately 100 different datasets from multiple sectors, we employ sophisticated and state-of-the-art research methods and data science technologies, and then translate the results into meaningful insights or recommendations for policy-makers.Our long and productive history of working with policy-makers has taught us much about making our research relevant to policy-makers. In this article, we outline some examples of how research evidence has been used to influence policy in Manitoba, and the key lessons we have learned about what makes relationships between researchers and policy-makers work. In essence, policy-makers have supported the growth of the Repository over the last 30 years, because researchers have “closed the loop” by sharing valuable and policy-relevant research results with them. This ability to inform policies, programs and service delivery with scientific evidence continues to benefit individuals, communities and our society as a whole.

Highlights

  • The Manitoba Centre for Health Policy: using whole-population administrative data to influence policy-makingHealth and social policy-making is a key part of the mandate of those who design, manage and lead public services at the macro, meso and micro levels

  • The often ‘siloed’ nature of policy development and service delivery can result in lost opportunities to coordinate services for individuals, families and communities whose needs span multiple departments

  • It provides an ongoing platform for two-way communication between scientists and analysts at Manitoba Centre for Health Policy (MCHP) and regional health planners in Manitoba

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Summary

Introduction

The Manitoba Centre for Health Policy: using whole-population administrative data to influence policy-making. It provides an ongoing platform for two-way communication between scientists and analysts at MCHP and regional health planners in Manitoba. The use of these additional data resources has been a model for population health data centres across Canada, inspiring other jurisdictions to begin to acquire similar databases In this way, evidence generated by MCHP continues to play a role on the national health policy stage even without direct relationships with federal government representatives.

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