Abstract

BackgroundOver the past decade, the World Health Organization (WHO) has implemented a standardized, evidence-informed guideline development process to assure technically sound and policy-relevant guidelines. This study is an independent evaluation of the adaptability of the guidelines produced by the Evidence and Programme Guidance unit, at the Department of Nutrition for Health and Development (NHD). The study systematizes the lessons learned by the NHD group at WHO.MethodsWe used a mixed methods approach to determine the adaptability of the nutrition guidelines. Adaptability was defined as having two components; methodological quality and implementability of guidelines. Additionally, we gathered recommendations to improve future guideline development in nutrition actions for health and development. Data sources for this evaluation were official documentation and feedback (both qualitative and quantitative) from key stakeholders involved in the development of nutrition guidelines. The qualitative data was collected through a desk review and two waves of semi-structured interviews (n = 12) and was analyzed through axial coding. Guideline adaptability was assessed quantitatively using two standardized instruments completed by key stakeholders. The Appraisal Guideline for Research and Evaluation questionnaire, version II was used to assess guideline quality (n = 6), while implementability was assessed with the electronic version of the GuideLine Implementability Appraisal (n = 7).ResultsThe nutrition evidence-informed guideline development process has several strengths, among them are the appropriate management of conflicts of interest of guideline developers and the systematic use of high-quality evidence to inform the recommendations. These features contribute to increase the methodological quality of the guidelines. The key areas for improvement are the limited implementability of the recommendations, the lack of explicit and precise implementation advice in the guidelines and challenges related to collaborative work within interdisciplinary groups.ConclusionsOverall, our study found that the nutrition evidence-informed guidelines are of good methodological quality but that the implementability requires improvement. The recommendations to improve guideline adaptability address the guideline content, the dynamics shaping interdisciplinary work, and actions for implementation feasibility. As WHO relies heavily on a standardized procedure to develop guidelines, the lessons learned may be applicable to guideline development across the organization and to other groups developing guidelines.

Highlights

  • Over the past decade, the World Health Organization (WHO) has implemented a standardized, evidence-informed guideline development process to assure technically sound and policy-relevant guidelines

  • The current evaluation focused on the guideline development process at WHO led by the Evidence and Programme, Guidance, Department of Nutrition of Health and Development, and used a mixed methods approach to (1) determine the level of adaptability of its guidelines, (2) identify the key characteristics of the evidence-informed guideline development process, and (3) produce recommendations to improve future guideline development in nutrition actions for health and development

  • The key areas for improvement are the limited implementability of recommendations and the challenges related to collaborative work within interdisciplinary groups

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Summary

Introduction

The World Health Organization (WHO) has implemented a standardized, evidence-informed guideline development process to assure technically sound and policy-relevant guidelines. In 2005, the organization launched a comprehensive undertaking to guarantee guideline quality This included devising a new process to ensure that WHO recommendations were informed by the best available evidence [1]. This process entails a thorough review of the available evidence through comprehensive systematic reviews of the effects of interventions using state-of-the-art methods for evidence retrieval, assessment, and synthesis that contribute to the rigor of the overall process [2, 3]. Since January 2009, all WHO technical units have adhered to the methods and processes laid out in the Handbook when developing guidelines

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