Introduction

The gap between the evidence that decision makers need and the evidence available to them is a common problem across many sectors. The problem is often framed as one of research translation; the ‘evidence producers’ need to do better at making their evidence accessible. But this pre-supposes that the right evidence is there, and it just needs to be presented differently and reach the right people.

It is increasingly recognised that addressing the current challenges facing people’s long-term health outcomes in the UK isn’t simply a problem of translation and access to existing evidence. It is a more fundamental problem: the evidence relevant to population-level action for long-term population health benefit – and the support to produce such evidence – is limited. Producing such evidence requires current public health challenges to be viewed as social, economic, political and cultural phenomena. It requires a wider set of disciplines to be deployed to both understand and address the challenges effectively. Reaching beyond the traditional health disciplines also means that decision makers must learn to be comfortable making decisions in the absence of traditional biomedical ‘gold standard’ evidence.

The Health Foundation’s Healthy Lives strategy aims to support efforts to build the knowledge and evidence for population-level interventions and public policies that improve health capabilities. It aims to provide policymakers and politicians with clear and viable options that stand the test of real world application.

Over the past decade (and more) there has been much discussion of how we reason about the scientific justification, validity and effectiveness of health interventions. On the one hand, the evidence-based medicine (EBM) movement has sought to transform medical practice into becoming more rational, systematic and effective. Its success in improving outcomes and standardising practice has led to EBM influencing related fields such as public health and public policymaking more broadly. One of the core aspects of EBM is that evidence comes in many forms, and such evidence can be ranked on a hierarchy of validity or trustworthiness. At the top sit the findings from systematic reviews of randomised controlled trials (RCTs). The EBM movement and the use of RCTs, in particular, have become prominent aspects of health policymaking as they can confidently answer the politician’s and policymaker’s plea of ‘just tell me what works?’.

On the other hand, there has been much critique of the plausibility and use of RCTs in public health and of their increasing applications in other social policy domains. It is now well known that there is a positive results bias in scientific publishing, which then causes bias in systematic reviews. Philosophers have also highlighted the limitations and patchiness of the chain of causation attributed to RCTs. In relation to public health or health-promoting interventions, the main issue regarding RCTs and evidence production more broadly has been that many population-level interventions cannot be tested through RCTs for pragmatic as well as ethical reasons. True, some public health interventions could be tested through an RCT format. But there are many potential population-level interventions that could not. As a result, the evidence about ‘what works’ is often limited to what is produced from RCTs of individual-level interventions.

As part of our Healthy Lives strategy, we are seeking to catalyse public and scientific discussions on expanding the diversity and conceptions of what constitutes evidence in public health, as well as the types of reasoning used to move from evidence to (public) action. There is an emerging acceptance that addressing the more pernicious health challenges facing the UK requires transdisciplinary and multisectoral coordination. Other disciplines and sectors have to be more than an ‘add-on’ to the biomedical sciences. More effective public health policies require true engagement and mutual exchange across disciplines. In producing that exchange, some major barriers to overcome are the different conceptions of evidence and reasoning about action. For example, an epidemiologist, a lawyer and an economist will each conceive causation differently. They will each also argue differently about what actions to take as a result, as well as when and how.

The following essays illustrate how different disciplines and professional practices conceptualise evidence and how they reason about moving from evidence to taking action. All contributors were asked to reflect on the problem of childhood obesity, which served as a shared focal point. Their brief was not to solve the problem of childhood obesity but to present their reasoning. Individually and all together, the essays are valuable for showing that diverse forms of evidence are indeed justifiable – and that there are also diverse ways in which different disciplines and professions achieve their goals.

It is reassuring to see some areas of similarity emerging across the essays. A consistent theme that comes through is the need to be engaged with and close to the people and communities you are working with. Conceptualising personal narratives as evidence, acknowledging the motivations and context of decision making, then testing and re-testing with people ensures that their problems are addressed or their wellbeing is improved. This contrasts to the evidence-producing practices in health sciences that abstract away from people and contexts; too often assuming they are all similar bodies which should be similarly affected by the interventions being researched or implemented. While such abstraction has been enormously helpful in addressing certain health issues in the past, our current and impending health challenges seem to demand we work more closely with the people involved and understand their lived reality. Entrenched health challenges cannot be addressed with generic solutions, but rather through context-relevant and people-centred interventions.

Too often the recognition of the complexity shaping people’s health becomes a barrier for action. These essays show that a broad range of disciplines and professional practices share similar goals to medicine and public health, to improve the health and wellbeing of people, and are acting on these goals through a broader appreciation of evidence. A City of London lawyer was able to galvanise a group of senior people from the business sector, working within their culture and reasoning, to mobilise action for improving the mental health of employees. A city planner designed pathways in order to keep the children active, playful and safe as they walk to school. We would recognise these as public health interventions; they would likely say that it is part of doing their jobs well. The public health community can take heart from the many capable and experienced partners in various fields who will willingly engage when asked.While appreciating what we can learn from this collection of essays, we should also acknowledge that many other perspectives were not included. We looked beyond the public health sciences and medicine to find potential contributors, but our imaginations and networks are also limited. It is likely that we have missed out on valuable insights that would have come forth had we ventured further into more unfamiliar disciplines and professional practices.

Nevertheless, these essays affirm our belief that opening out the conversation on evidence and its use in public health policies, broadly understood, is both necessary and timely.

Sridhar Venkatapuram and Jo Bibby

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