
Implementation research for prevention of noncommunicable disease risk factors in the WHO European Region: experiences and lessons learned from pilot projects in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan / World Health Organization. Regional Office for Europe
Tác giả : World Health Organization. Regional Office for Europe
Nhà xuất bản : World Health Organization. Regional Office for Europe
Năm xuất bản : 2024
Chủ đề : 1. Health Behavior. 2. Implementation Science. 3. Noncommunicable Diseases. 4. Nutrition Policy. 5. Primary Health Care. 6. Risk Factors. 7. Technical documents.
Thông tin chi tiết
Tóm tắt : | Implementation research (IR) is a recent scientific approach used to assess implementation of health policies, programmes and services and investigate factors that may affect policies or interventions during their implementation or use in real-life settings; defined as aiming “to support and promote successful application of interventions demonstrated to be effective” by describing implementation processes, including contextual factors that may affect or alter them. The WHO Regional Office for Europe is engaged in actively assisting to build countries’ IR capacity and to enable effective implementation of recommended noncommunicable disease (NCD) policies through supporting Member States in identifying and closing gaps between evidence and practice. This report aims to outline how IR can accelerate progress towards reducing the prevalence of NCDs and premature mortality due to them, aligned to WHO and Sustainable Development Goal targets of a 33% reduction. It describes terminology related to IR and its role in improving implementation of health policies, programmes and services, and presents lessons learned from the initial phases of two pilot IR projects: school nutrition policies in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, and brief interventions for NCD risk factors within primary care in Uzbekistan. Also covered are strategies to improve stakeholder involvement, and capacity-building activities aimed at supporting meaningful engagement between researchers and policy-makers to reduce gaps between theoretical approaches and on-the ground capacity for implementation of NCD policies across central Asian countries and the WHO European Region. x, 84 p. |
Thông tin dữ liệu nguồn
Thư viện | Ký hiệu xếp giá | Dữ liệu nguồn |
---|---|---|
![]() |
|
https://iris.who.int/handle/10665/378370 |