School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
School of Public Health Sciences, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2024 Jun 3;22(1):66. doi: 10.1186/s12961-024-01146-2.
The challenges of evidence-informed decision-making in a public health emergency have never been so notable as during the COVID-19 pandemic. Questions about the decision-making process, including what forms of evidence were used, and how evidence informed-or did not inform-policy have been debated.
We examined decision-makers' observations on evidence-use in early COVID-19 policy-making in British Columbia (BC), Canada through a qualitative case study. From July 2021- January 2022, we conducted 18 semi-structured key informant interviews with BC elected officials, provincial and regional-level health officials, and civil society actors involved in the public health response. The questions focused on: (1) the use of evidence in policy-making; (2) the interface between researchers and policy-makers; and (3) key challenges perceived by respondents as barriers to applying evidence to COVID-19 policy decisions. Data were analyzed thematically, using a constant comparative method. Framework analysis was also employed to generate analytic insights across stakeholder perspectives.
Overall, while many actors' impressions were that BC's early COVID-19 policy response was evidence-informed, an overarching theme was a lack of clarity and uncertainty as to what evidence was used and how it flowed into decision-making processes. Perspectives diverged on the relationship between 'government' and public health expertise, and whether or not public health actors had an independent voice in articulating evidence to inform pandemic governance. Respondents perceived a lack of coordination and continuity across data sources, and a lack of explicit guidelines on evidence-use in the decision-making process, which resulted in a sense of fragmentation. The tension between the processes involved in research and the need for rapid decision-making was perceived as a barrier to using evidence to inform policy.
Areas to be considered in planning for future emergencies include: information flow between policy-makers and researchers, coordination of data collection and use, and transparency as to how decisions are made-all of which reflect a need to improve communication. Based on our findings, clear mechanisms and processes for channeling varied forms of evidence into decision-making need to be identified, and doing so will strengthen preparedness for future public health crises.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,公共卫生紧急情况下证据决策所面临的挑战从未如此显著。人们对决策过程提出了质疑,包括使用了哪些形式的证据,以及证据如何影响或没有影响政策。
通过对加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC)在 COVID-19 早期决策过程中决策者对证据使用的观察,我们进行了一项定性案例研究。2021 年 7 月至 2022 年 1 月,我们对参与公共卫生应对的 BC 民选官员、省级和地区卫生官员以及民间社会行为者进行了 18 次半结构化的关键知情者访谈。问题集中在:(1)政策制定中的证据使用;(2)研究人员和决策者之间的接口;以及(3)受访者认为是将证据应用于 COVID-19 政策决策的障碍的主要挑战。使用恒定性比较方法对数据进行了主题分析。还采用了框架分析来生成跨利益相关者视角的分析见解。
总体而言,尽管许多参与者的印象是 BC 的 COVID-19 早期政策反应是有证据支持的,但一个总体主题是缺乏明确性和不确定性,即不清楚使用了哪些证据以及它如何流入决策过程。“政府”与公共卫生专业知识之间的关系以及公共卫生行为者是否有独立的发言权来阐明证据以告知大流行病治理的观点存在分歧。受访者认为,数据源之间缺乏协调和连续性,决策过程中缺乏明确的证据使用指南,这导致了一种支离破碎的感觉。研究过程与快速决策的需要之间的紧张关系被认为是利用证据为政策提供信息的障碍。
在为未来的紧急情况做规划时需要考虑的方面包括:决策者和研究人员之间的信息流动、数据收集和使用的协调,以及决策的透明度-所有这些都反映出需要加强沟通。根据我们的发现,需要确定将各种形式的证据纳入决策的明确机制和流程,这将为未来的公共卫生危机做好准备。