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Research utilization and the impact of health promotion policy
Authors:von Lengerke Thomas  Rütten Alfred  Vinck Jan  Abel Thomas  Kannas Lasse  Lüschen Günther  Rodríguez Diaz Josep A  van der Zee Jouke
Institution:(1) GSF-National Research Center for Environment and Health, 1129, 85758 Neuherberg, Germany;(2) Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany;(3) Limburg University Centre, Diepenbeek, Germany;(4) University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland;(5) University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland;(6) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (em.), Illinois, USA;(7) University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain;(8) Netherlands Institute of Health Services Research, Utrecht, Netherland
Abstract:Summary Objectives:The conditions under which research utilization leads to policy impact are an important issue in health promotion. This analysis tests the assumption that utilization is positively associated with policy impact only if both political will (i.e., policy opportunities) and social strategies (in intervention and implementation) are present.Methods:A survey of 719 policymakers involved in four poli-cies was conducted in six European countries. Policy impact (output, i.e., program implementation, and outcome, i.e., effects on behavior) and its proposed determinants were analyzed.Results:Regression analyses reveal limited cross-national differences in research utilization, but show comparably high use in policies with a pathogenic focus. Utilization is associated with impact only if political will is lacking; for outcome, this tends to depend on social strategies. Political will is the strongest determinant of impact.Conclusions:Research utilization is not supporting health promotion policy impact if political will is favorable, but if it is poor; political will itself is the crucial determinant of impact. The study contributes to the ldquoresearch utilizationrdquo-field by showing that research utilization may partially compensate for lack of, rather than depend on, political will.
Keywords:Research utilization  Science/policy-relationship  Public health  Health promotion  Health policy models  Policy impact
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