Abstract

BackgroundLocal public health service delivery and policy-setting in England was overhauled in 2013, with local government now responsible for the complex tasks involved in protecting and improving population health and addressing health inequalities. Since 2013, public health funding per person has declined, adding to the challenge of public health decision-making. In a climate of austerity, research evidence could help to guide the more effective use of resources, although there are concerns that the reorganisation of public health decision-making structures has disrupted traditional evidence use patterns. This study aimed to explore local public health evidence use and needs in this new decision-making climate.MethodsSemi-structured interviews with Public Health Practitioners across three Local Authorities were conducted, with sites purposefully selected to represent urban, suburban and county Local Authorities, and to reflect a range of public health issues that might be encountered. A topic guide was developed that allowed participants to reflect on their experience and involvement in providing evidence for, or making a decision around, commissioning a public health service. Data were transcribed and template analysis was employed to understand the findings, which involved developing a coding template based on an initial transcript and applying this to subsequent transcripts.ResultsIncreased political involvement in local public health decision-making, while welcomed by some participants as a form of democratising public health, has influenced evidence preferences in a number of ways. Political and individual ideologies of locally elected officials meant that certain forms of evidence could be overlooked in favour of evidence that corresponded to decision-makers’ preferences. Political involvement at the local level has increased the appetite for local knowledge and evidence. Research evidence needs to demonstrate its local salience if it is to contribute to decision-making alongside competing sources, particularly anecdotal information.ConclusionTo better meet decision-making needs of politicians and practitioners, a shift in the scope of public health evidence is required. At a systematic review level, this could involve moving away from producing evidence that reflects broad global generalisations about narrow and simple questions, and instead towards producing forms of evidence that have local applicability and can support complex policy-focussed decisions.

Highlights

  • Local public health service delivery and policy-setting in England was overhauled in 2013, with local government responsible for the complex tasks involved in protecting and improving population health and addressing health inequalities

  • Within England, alongside these broad responsibilities, Public Health Practitioner (PHP) have recently negotiated the transition of public health decision-making away from the National Health Service (NHS) into Local Authorities (LAs, local government) and Health and Wellbeing Boards, following the implementation of the Health and Social Care Act 2013 [1]

  • Results were thematised into three broad groups, namely evidence-use drivers that reflect the changing landscape of public health decision-making since 2013, evidence-use drivers that we described as ‘entrenched’ that likely pre-date 2013, and unmet evidence requirements that follow from these drivers

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Summary

Introduction

Local public health service delivery and policy-setting in England was overhauled in 2013, with local government responsible for the complex tasks involved in protecting and improving population health and addressing health inequalities. Primary studies have variously focussed on the way in which PHPs use evidence within newly created Health and Wellbeing Boards [7, 12, 13], the way in which evidence on social determinants of health is used by decision-makers working outside health [9], or on particular health areas such as alcohol policy [11] or a particular type of evidence such as national evidence-based guidelines [8, 10] These have reinforced the perception that the reorganisation of public health decision-making has introduced a political dimension to the use of evidence [8, 10, 11, 13], which has disrupted established evidence use preferences [8, 10, 11, 13] and introduced a greater demand for locally sourced evidence [10, 11]. Our previous systematic review highlighted a need to better understand how disruptions to evidence use patterns in public health have changed decision-making processes, and how evidence generators need to respond [2]

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