Generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in Uganda and Zambia

Abstract Background The Demand-Driven Evaluations for Decisions (3DE) programme was piloted in Zambia and Uganda in 2012–2015. It aimed to answer evaluative questions raised by policymakers in Ministries of Health, rapidly and with limited resources. The aim of our evaluation was to assess whether t...

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Main Authors: Sophie Witter, Andrew Kardan, Molly Scott, Lucie Moore, Louise Shaxson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-10-01
Series:Health Research Policy and Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12961-017-0250-4
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spelling doaj-aed206984fa0459fb3892420a37da1fd2020-11-25T01:49:17ZengBMCHealth Research Policy and Systems1478-45052017-10-0115111210.1186/s12961-017-0250-4Generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in Uganda and ZambiaSophie Witter0Andrew Kardan1Molly Scott2Lucie Moore3Louise Shaxson4International Health Financing and Health Systems, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh and Oxford Policy Management AssociateOxford Policy ManagementOxford Policy ManagementOxford Policy ManagementODIAbstract Background The Demand-Driven Evaluations for Decisions (3DE) programme was piloted in Zambia and Uganda in 2012–2015. It aimed to answer evaluative questions raised by policymakers in Ministries of Health, rapidly and with limited resources. The aim of our evaluation was to assess whether the 3DE model was successful in supporting and increasing evidence-based policymaking, building capacity and changing behaviour of Ministry staff. Methods Using mixed methods, we compared the ex-ante theory of change with what had happened in practice, why and with what results (intended and unintended), including a qualitative assessment of 3DE’s contribution. Data sources included a structured quality assessment of the five impact evaluations produced, 46 key informant interviews at national and international levels, structured extraction from 170 programme documents, a wider literature review of relevant topics, and a political economy analysis conducted in Zambia. Results We found that 3DE had a very limited contribution to changing evidence-based policymaking, capacity and behaviour in both countries as a result of having a number of aspirations not all compatible with one another. Co-developing evaluation questions was more time-consuming than anticipated, Ministry evidence needs did not fit neatly into questions suitable for impact evaluations and constricted timeframes for undertaking trials did not necessarily produce the most effective results and value for money. The evaluation recommended a focusing of objectives and a more strategic approach to strengthening evaluative demand and capacity. Conclusions Lessons emerge that are likely to apply in other low- and middle-income settings, such as the importance of supporting evaluative thinking and capacity within wider institutions, of understanding the political economy of evidence use and its uptake, and of allowing for some flexibility in terms of programme targets. Fixating on one type of evidence is unhelpful in the context of institutions like ministries of health, which require a wide range of evidence to plan and deliver programmes. In addition, having success tied to indicators, such as number of ‘policy decisions made’, provides potentially perverse incentives and neglects arguably more important aspects such as incremental programmatic adjustments and improved implementation.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12961-017-0250-4Theory-based evaluationEvidence-based policyCapacity-buildingHealth programmesZambiaUganda
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophie Witter
Andrew Kardan
Molly Scott
Lucie Moore
Louise Shaxson
spellingShingle Sophie Witter
Andrew Kardan
Molly Scott
Lucie Moore
Louise Shaxson
Generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in Uganda and Zambia
Health Research Policy and Systems
Theory-based evaluation
Evidence-based policy
Capacity-building
Health programmes
Zambia
Uganda
author_facet Sophie Witter
Andrew Kardan
Molly Scott
Lucie Moore
Louise Shaxson
author_sort Sophie Witter
title Generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in Uganda and Zambia
title_short Generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in Uganda and Zambia
title_full Generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in Uganda and Zambia
title_fullStr Generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in Uganda and Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in Uganda and Zambia
title_sort generating demand for and use of evaluation evidence in government health ministries: lessons from a pilot programme in uganda and zambia
publisher BMC
series Health Research Policy and Systems
issn 1478-4505
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Abstract Background The Demand-Driven Evaluations for Decisions (3DE) programme was piloted in Zambia and Uganda in 2012–2015. It aimed to answer evaluative questions raised by policymakers in Ministries of Health, rapidly and with limited resources. The aim of our evaluation was to assess whether the 3DE model was successful in supporting and increasing evidence-based policymaking, building capacity and changing behaviour of Ministry staff. Methods Using mixed methods, we compared the ex-ante theory of change with what had happened in practice, why and with what results (intended and unintended), including a qualitative assessment of 3DE’s contribution. Data sources included a structured quality assessment of the five impact evaluations produced, 46 key informant interviews at national and international levels, structured extraction from 170 programme documents, a wider literature review of relevant topics, and a political economy analysis conducted in Zambia. Results We found that 3DE had a very limited contribution to changing evidence-based policymaking, capacity and behaviour in both countries as a result of having a number of aspirations not all compatible with one another. Co-developing evaluation questions was more time-consuming than anticipated, Ministry evidence needs did not fit neatly into questions suitable for impact evaluations and constricted timeframes for undertaking trials did not necessarily produce the most effective results and value for money. The evaluation recommended a focusing of objectives and a more strategic approach to strengthening evaluative demand and capacity. Conclusions Lessons emerge that are likely to apply in other low- and middle-income settings, such as the importance of supporting evaluative thinking and capacity within wider institutions, of understanding the political economy of evidence use and its uptake, and of allowing for some flexibility in terms of programme targets. Fixating on one type of evidence is unhelpful in the context of institutions like ministries of health, which require a wide range of evidence to plan and deliver programmes. In addition, having success tied to indicators, such as number of ‘policy decisions made’, provides potentially perverse incentives and neglects arguably more important aspects such as incremental programmatic adjustments and improved implementation.
topic Theory-based evaluation
Evidence-based policy
Capacity-building
Health programmes
Zambia
Uganda
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12961-017-0250-4
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