Abstract

BackgroundThe value placed on types of evidence within decision-making contexts is highly dependent on individuals, the organizations in which the work and the systems and sectors they operate in. Decision-making processes too are highly contextual. Understanding the values placed on evidence and processes guiding decision-making is crucial to designing strategies to support evidence-informed decision-making (EIDM). This paper describes how evidence is used to inform local government (LG) public health decisions.MethodsThe study used mixed methods including a cross-sectional survey and interviews. The Evidence-Informed Decision-Making Tool (EvIDenT) survey was designed to assess three key domains likely to impact on EIDM: access, confidence, and organizational culture. Other elements included the usefulness and influence of sources of evidence (people/groups and resources), skills and barriers, and facilitators to EIDM. Forty-five LGs from Victoria, Australia agreed to participate in the survey and up to four people from each organization were invited to complete the survey (n = 175). To further explore definitions of evidence and generate experiential data on EIDM practice, key informant interviews were conducted with a range of LG employees working in areas relevant to public health.ResultsIn total, 135 responses were received (75% response rate) and 13 interviews were conducted. Analysis revealed varying levels of access, confidence and organizational culture to support EIDM. Significant relationships were found between domains: confidence, culture and access to research evidence. Some forms of evidence (e.g. community views) appeared to be used more commonly and at the expense of others (e.g. research evidence). Overall, a mixture of evidence (but more internal than external evidence) was influential in public health decision-making in councils. By comparison, a mixture of evidence (but more external than internal evidence) was deemed to be useful in public health decision-making.ConclusionsThis study makes an important contribution to understanding how evidence is used within the public health LG context.Trial registrationACTRN12609000953235.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13012-014-0188-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Theoretical frameworks The overall theoretical approach for this study was informed by the Evidence-Informed Policy and Practice Pathway (EIPPP) [1] which was used to guide the exploration of policy influences, context and decision-making factors, and their impact on sourcing, using and considering capacity to implement within an evidence-informed framework [1]

  • It provides a unique perspective of these issues for local government (LG) agencies, which are inherently multi-sectoral and where evidence must be drawn from various sources to inform local decisions

  • Government policy has articulated the need for evidence to inform local policy and planning, and the importance of evidence-informed decision-making (EIDM) in public health is acknowledged as important to improve population health

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Summary

Introduction

The value placed on types of evidence within decision-making contexts is highly dependent on individuals, the organizations in which the work and the systems and sectors they operate in. Evidence-informed decision-making (EIDM) refers to the process of combining a range of sources of evidence to inform a decision [1,2,3] This occurs within a political context that requires consideration of a range of other factors including research evidence, Armstrong et al Implementation Science (2014) 9:188 makers such as online repositories and evidence summaries, the effort has not been delivered systematically. Individuals working in LG public health teams come from very varied educational and professional backgrounds such as environmental science, sport and recreation, social planning, in addition to health promotion and public health specialists This differs significantly from other jurisdictions dominated by medically trained public health practitioners (Canada and UK)

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