How can we support best practice? A situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public health

Abstract Background To effectively impact the significant population burden of injury, we completed a situational assessment of injury prevention practice within a provincial public health system to identify system-wide priorities for capacity-building to advance injury prevention in public health....

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Main Authors: Sarah A. Richmond, Sarah Carsley, Rachel Prowse, Heather Manson, Brent Moloughney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-04-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08514-x
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spelling doaj-ddba07ff5e164b308bb1e4d37b119f902020-11-25T02:12:54ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582020-04-0120111010.1186/s12889-020-08514-xHow can we support best practice? A situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public healthSarah A. Richmond0Sarah Carsley1Rachel Prowse2Heather Manson3Brent Moloughney4Applied Public Health Science Unit, Health Promotion, Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Public Health OntarioApplied Public Health Science Unit, Health Promotion, Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Public Health OntarioApplied Public Health Science Unit, Health Promotion, Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Public Health OntarioHealth Promotion, Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Public Health OntarioHealth Promotion, Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Public Health OntarioAbstract Background To effectively impact the significant population burden of injury, we completed a situational assessment of injury prevention practice within a provincial public health system to identify system-wide priorities for capacity-building to advance injury prevention in public health. Methods A descriptive qualitative study was used to collect data on the current practice, challenges and needs of support for injury prevention. Data was collected through semi-structured interviews (n = 20) and focus groups (n = 19). Participants included a cross-section of injury prevention practitioners and leadership from public health units reflecting different population sizes and geographic characteristics, in addition to public health researchers and experts from academia, public health and not-for-profit organizations. Thematic analysis was used to code all of the data by one reviewer, followed by a second independent reviewer who coded a random selection of interview notes. Major codes and sub codes were identified and final themes were decided through iterations of coding comparisons and categorization. Once data were analysed, we confirmed the findings with the field, in addition to participating in a prioritization exercise to surface the top three needs for support. Results Major themes that were identified from the data included: current public health practice challenges; capacity and resource constraints, and; injury as a low priority area. Overall, injury prevention is a broad, complex topic that competes with other areas of public health. Best practices are challenged by system-wide factors related to resources, direction, coordination, collaboration, and emerging injury public health issues. Injury is a reportedly under prioritized and under resourced public health area of practice. Practitioners believe that increasing access to data and evidence, and improving collaboration and networking is required to promote best practice. Conclusions The results of this study suggest that there are several system level needs to support best practice in public health injury prevention in Ontario including reducing research to practice gaps and supporting opportunities for collaboration. Our research contributes to the literature of the complexity of public health practice, and presents several mechanisms of support to increase capacity at a system level to improve injury prevention practice, and eventually lessen the population burden of injury.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08514-xSituational assessmentPublic healthInjury preventionCapacity buildingBest practice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah A. Richmond
Sarah Carsley
Rachel Prowse
Heather Manson
Brent Moloughney
spellingShingle Sarah A. Richmond
Sarah Carsley
Rachel Prowse
Heather Manson
Brent Moloughney
How can we support best practice? A situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public health
BMC Public Health
Situational assessment
Public health
Injury prevention
Capacity building
Best practice
author_facet Sarah A. Richmond
Sarah Carsley
Rachel Prowse
Heather Manson
Brent Moloughney
author_sort Sarah A. Richmond
title How can we support best practice? A situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public health
title_short How can we support best practice? A situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public health
title_full How can we support best practice? A situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public health
title_fullStr How can we support best practice? A situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public health
title_full_unstemmed How can we support best practice? A situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public health
title_sort how can we support best practice? a situational assessment of injury prevention practice in public health
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract Background To effectively impact the significant population burden of injury, we completed a situational assessment of injury prevention practice within a provincial public health system to identify system-wide priorities for capacity-building to advance injury prevention in public health. Methods A descriptive qualitative study was used to collect data on the current practice, challenges and needs of support for injury prevention. Data was collected through semi-structured interviews (n = 20) and focus groups (n = 19). Participants included a cross-section of injury prevention practitioners and leadership from public health units reflecting different population sizes and geographic characteristics, in addition to public health researchers and experts from academia, public health and not-for-profit organizations. Thematic analysis was used to code all of the data by one reviewer, followed by a second independent reviewer who coded a random selection of interview notes. Major codes and sub codes were identified and final themes were decided through iterations of coding comparisons and categorization. Once data were analysed, we confirmed the findings with the field, in addition to participating in a prioritization exercise to surface the top three needs for support. Results Major themes that were identified from the data included: current public health practice challenges; capacity and resource constraints, and; injury as a low priority area. Overall, injury prevention is a broad, complex topic that competes with other areas of public health. Best practices are challenged by system-wide factors related to resources, direction, coordination, collaboration, and emerging injury public health issues. Injury is a reportedly under prioritized and under resourced public health area of practice. Practitioners believe that increasing access to data and evidence, and improving collaboration and networking is required to promote best practice. Conclusions The results of this study suggest that there are several system level needs to support best practice in public health injury prevention in Ontario including reducing research to practice gaps and supporting opportunities for collaboration. Our research contributes to the literature of the complexity of public health practice, and presents several mechanisms of support to increase capacity at a system level to improve injury prevention practice, and eventually lessen the population burden of injury.
topic Situational assessment
Public health
Injury prevention
Capacity building
Best practice
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08514-x
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