Authors
Ray Pawson, Trisha Greenhalgh, Gill Harvey, Kieran Walshe
Publication date
2005/7
Source
Journal of health services research & policy
Volume
10
Issue
1_suppl
Pages
21-34
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Evidence-based policy is a dominant theme in contemporary public services but the practical realities and challenges involved in using evidence in policy-making are formidable. Part of the problem is one of complexity. In health services and other public services, we are dealing with complex social interventions which act on complex social systems-things like league tables, performance measures, regulation and inspection, or funding reforms. These are not ‘magic bullets‘ which will always hit their target, but programmes whose effects are crucially dependent on context and implementation. Traditional methods of review focus on measuring and reporting on programme effectiveness, often find that the evidence is mixed or conflicting, and provide little or no clue as to why the intervention worked or did not work when applied in different contexts or circumstances, deployed by different stakeholders, or used for …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Pawson, T Greenhalgh, G Harvey, K Walshe - Journal of health services research & policy, 2005