Abstract
The importance of health research utilisation in policy-making, and of understanding the mechanisms involved, is increasingly recognised. Recent reports calling for more resources to improve health in developing countries, and global pressures for accountability, draw greater attention to research-informed policy-making. Key utilisation issues have been described for at least twenty years, but the growing focus on health research systems creates additional dimensions.
The utilisation of health research in policy-making should contribute to policies that may eventually lead to desired outcomes, including health gains. In this article, exploration of these issues is combined with a review of various forms of policy-making. When this is linked to analysis of different types of health research, it assists in building a comprehensive account of the diverse meanings of research utilisation.
Previous studies report methods and conceptual frameworks that have been applied, if with varying degrees of success, to record utilisation in policy-making. These studies reveal various examples of research impact within a general picture of underutilisation.
Factors potentially enhancing utilisation can be identified by exploration of: priority setting; activities of the health research system at the interface between research and policy-making; and the role of the recipients, or 'receptors', of health research. An interfaces and receptors model provides a framework for analysis.
Recommendations about possible methods for assessing health research utilisation follow identification of the purposes of such assessments. Our conclusion is that research utilisation can be better understood, and enhanced, by developing assessment methods informed by conceptual analysis and review of previous studies.
Review
Introduction and Background
The Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO) has decided that the World Health Report 2004, Health Research: Knowledge for Better Health, should involve a careful reflection of how advances in health research lead to improved health and health equity. The WHO has launched a broad Health Research Systems Analysis (HRSA) Initiative that will inform the 2004 report. One component of this initiative is a project focusing on the assessment of health research utilisation. The utilisation project itself consists of various elements. This paper was commissioned by the Research Policy and Co-operation Department of WHO, Geneva, to review the issues related to the utilisation of health research in policy-making, and, based on that review, make recommendations about appropriate methods for assessment of such utilisation.
WHO is giving increased emphasis to the role of health systems and attention is focusing on the importance of policy-making in achieving effective health systems . The World Bank made estimates of the costs of attaining the health-related Millennium Development Goals of between $20 and $25 billion a year. However, the report notes that: 'these unit cost estimates only apply when the policy and institutional environment is conducive to additional health spending being effective'. The importance of health policy-making, in turn, being research-informed is recognised by a growing number of bodies.
The existence of relevant research, though necessary, is not sufficient. Evidence-based policy is difficult to achieve and it is widely agreed that health policies do not reflect research evidence to the extent that in theory they could. Examination of the policy-making process confirms it to be extremely complex, with many genuine obstacles to evidence-based policy-making at the same time as there are factors that could increase research utilisation. A full review of the many possible meanings of research impact reveals that there may be more utilisation in policy-making than is sometimes recognised. Such a review also enhances understanding of the issues, including the differential scope for utilisation associated with different types of research and policy environments. Developing a conceptual framework of the processes of utilisation should assist with the formulation of assessment tools that reveal the full picture of the way research is used in policy-making. Furthermore, it should allow the growing demands for accountability for research expenditure to be addressed appropriately, which could also be of benefit to the research community.
There is a rich background of material for each of these areas, including key contributions from Weiss identifying the multiple meanings that can be attached to research utilisation in policy-making. Their importance lies in the fact that some of these meanings, or models, point to less obvious patterns of use than those suggested by instrumental research exploitation which involves research findings being directly used in policy formulation.
About twenty years ago there was recognition of the need for analysis to combine a range of factors such as the nature of different types of health research knowledge and the diverse institutional arrangements for policy-making. In their assessment of the attempt in the 1970s to increase utilisation of research funded by the UK's Department of Health, Kogan and Henkel found, 'the interconnections between epistemologies and institutional relationships were a recurring theme'. The importance of interactions across the interfaces between researchers and policy-makers was identified. The role of policy-makers as the receivers, or receptors, of research and the need for careful priority setting were highlighted. Various elements of this analysis were recently reported also to be relevant for health research in Mexico.
The context of the current move to attempt to increase research utilisation is important. There is now a broad coalition pressing for improvements. Various organisations came together in 2000 to support the formation of the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research with its 300 partner institutions. It aims to promote capacity building for, and the dissemination and impact of, research both on and for policy. At the level of specific programmes within international bodies, there is a growing stress on the role of policy-making: 'Research on implementation, on policy-making or programme development is as important as basic clinical research for improving child health'. Recent weeks have seen publication of the first systematic review to address research utilisation in policy-making. Furthermore, the developing interest in research informed policy-making coincides with the extensive efforts being made to increase the implementation of health research findings more generally. Indeed, the emphasis on evidence-based medicine is itself generating extra pressure from practitioners that policy-makers, too, should have a duty to consider research evidence. The role of research utilisation in policy-making is seen as a key element in the growing interest within WHO on research utilisation and its assessment.
A further important part of the context is that developments in the UK in the 1970s, and in other European countries, could be seen as early attempts to develop a system to augment the traditional individualistic determination of medical research priorities in universities and hospitals. A similar emphasis on issues such as priority setting is seen in recommendations made for middle and low income countries by the Commission on Health Research for Development. The concept of Health Research Systems (HRSs) is now of growing significance. One of the main elements that distinguishes a HRS is the attempt to develop mechanisms and networks to facilitate the greater use of health research.
Building on the above analysis, it is our contention that many factors need to be brought together if assessment of research impact on policy-making is to contribute to an understanding of the issues and an enhancement of utilisation. The prime focus should be the policy-maker. This paper first examines the concept of policy-making, and the underlying assumption that it is better if it is research-informed. Then we consider the range of types of health research and the levels of policy-making at which they could be applied. These strands are brought together to provide an analysis of the wide range of ways in which research can have an impact on health policy-making.
The focus then moves to examining contributions from previous studies of knowledge utilisation in health policy-making, including those using standardised measures. Various dimensions of our conceptual analysis form the next sections. We start with the interfaces, both at the priority setting stage and when findings are communicated between researchers and policy-makers. The role of policy-makers as receivers, or receptors, of research is examined along with the accompanying institutional arrangements. Incentives are also important. The material is brought together in a wide-ranging interfaces and receptor model of research utilisation in policy making. Finally, the various possible purposes of assessment of research utilisation are considered before suggestions are made about suitable methods for assessing the impact of research on policy-making. Such assessments would be best undertaken as part of a wider evaluation of the utilisation of health research by industry, medical practitioners and the public.
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