Abstract

BackgroundEnhancing the use of evidence in policymaking is critical to addressing the global burden of nutrition-related disease. Whilst the public health nutrition community has embraced evidence-informed policymaking, their approach of defining relevant evidence and evaluating policy has not brought about major shifts in policymaking. This article uses a public health nutrition case study to refine a novel theory-informed framework for enhancing the use of evidence in government public health nutrition policymaking. Our aim is to contribute insights from evidence-informed policy to the emerging paradigm in public health nutrition policymaking.MethodsAn enquiry framework informed by three groups of theories underpinning evidence-informed policy was used to explore the role of socially mediated processes on the use of evidence. A public health nutrition case study on food marketing to New Zealand children was conducted to refine the framework. Interview data collected from 54 individuals representing four key policy stakeholder groups, policymakers, academics, and food industry and non-government organisations were analysed using deductive and inductive thematic analysis. To enhance theoretical robustness, an alternative hypothesis of political explanations for evidence use was explored alongside the enquiry framework.ResultsWe found the prevailing political climate influenced the impact of advocacy for evidence inclusive processes at the meta-policy and policymaking process levels and in policy community relationships. Low levels of awareness of the impact of these processes on evidence use and uncoordinated advocacy resulted in the perpetuation of ad hoc policymaking. These findings informed refinements to the enquiry framework.ConclusionOur study highlights the role advocates can play in shifting government public health nutrition policymaking systems towards enhanced use of evidence. Our Advocacy for Evidence Use framework argues for a three-channel approach to advocacy for using evidence in the public interest. The framework provides a means for building a constituency for evidence use in public health nutrition and adds understanding about advocacy to the field of evidence-informed policy. Future research should examine the impact of coordinated advocacy on public health nutrition policymaking systems.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12961-016-0154-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Enhancing the use of evidence in policymaking is critical to addressing the global burden of nutrition-related disease

  • The results are organised around the role of advocates in the three components of the enquiry framework: meta-policy, sustained relationships and deliberative policy processes

  • Our work indicates that, when these structures exist over time and across policy issues, they are important for sustaining relationships across a policy community

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Summary

Introduction

Enhancing the use of evidence in policymaking is critical to addressing the global burden of nutrition-related disease. Our aim is to contribute insights from evidence-informed policy to the emerging paradigm in public health nutrition policymaking. The 2015 Lancet series on obesity argues for ‘new thinking’ by addressing issues at both the individual and environmental level and pursuing policy-based approaches to changing the food environment [7,8,9,10]. For these sciencebased arguments to gain traction this evidence-policy interface requires closer examination [11]. We define evidence broadly including quantitative, qualitative and synthesised evidence produced by a range of methods

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