Deakin University
Browse
carter-developingmethodologies-1996.pdf (841.09 kB)

Developing methodologies for evaluating community-wide health promotion

Download (841.09 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 1996-09-01, 00:00 authored by R Sanson-Fisher, S Redman, L Hancock, S Halpin, P Clarke, M Schofield, R Burton, M Hensley, R Gibberd, A Reid, R Walsh, A Girgis, L Burton, A McClintock, Rob CarterRob Carter, A Donner, S Green
There has been growing recognition that health promotion programs which target whole communities are more likely to be effective in changing health behaviour. However, studies evaluating the impact of community-wide health promotion programs rarely use adequate methodology. Randomised control trials where multiple whole communities are randomly assigned to control and intervention groups are optimum if evaluators hope to validly attribute changes in health behaviour to the intervention. However, such trials present a number of difficulties including cost and feasibility limitations and the evolving nature of statistical techniques. This paper proposes applying a fairly well-accepted phased evaluation approach to the evaluation of community participation programs, using three defined phases. Phase 1 consists of small-scale studies to develop the measures and assess acceptability and feasibility of the intervention; Phase 2 consists of studies in a small number of communities designed to trial the intervention in the real world; Phase 3 studies use an appropriate number of entire communities to provide valid evidence of efficacy of the intervention. It is suggested that criteria be resolved to identify adequate studies at each stage and that advantages and limitations of Phase 1 and 2 studies be clearly identified. The paper describes the major design, sampling and analysis considerations for a Phase 3 study.

History

Journal

Health promotion international

Volume

11

Issue

3

Pagination

227 - 236

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Location

Oxford, Eng.

ISSN

0957-4824

eISSN

1460-2245

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

1996, OUP