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Making the most of natural experiments: What can studies of the withdrawal of public health interventions offer?

Craig, P. , Gibson, M. , Campbell, M. , Popham, F. and Katikireddi, S. V. (2018) Making the most of natural experiments: What can studies of the withdrawal of public health interventions offer? Preventive Medicine, 108, pp. 17-22. (doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2017.12.025) (PMID:29288780) (PMCID:PMC6711756)

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Abstract

Many interventions that may have large impacts on health and health inequalities, such as social and public health policies and health system reforms, are not amenable to evaluation using randomised controlled trials. The United Kingdom Medical Research Council's guidance on the evaluation of natural experiments draws attention to the need for ingenuity to identify interventions which can be robustly studied as they occur, and without experimental manipulation. Studies of intervention withdrawal may usefully widen the range of interventions that can be evaluated, allowing some interventions and policies, such as those that have developed piecemeal over a long period, to be evaluated for the first time. In particular, sudden removal may allow a more robust assessment of an intervention's long-term impact by minimising ‘learning effects’. Interpreting changes that follow withdrawal as evidence of the impact of an intervention assumes that the effect is reversible and this assumption must be carefully justified. Otherwise, withdrawal-based studies suffer similar threats to validity as intervention studies. These threats should be addressed using recognised approaches, including appropriate choice of comparators, detailed understanding of the change processes at work, careful specification of research questions, and the use of falsification tests and other methods for strengthening causal attribution. Evaluating intervention withdrawal provides opportunities to answer important questions about effectiveness of population health interventions, and to study the social determinants of health. Researchers, policymakers and practitioners should be alert to the opportunities provided by the withdrawal of interventions, but also aware of the pitfalls.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Campbell, Ms Mhairi and Katikireddi, Professor Vittal and Gibson, Dr Marcia and Popham, Dr Frank and Craig, Professor Peter
Authors: Craig, P., Gibson, M., Campbell, M., Popham, F., and Katikireddi, S. V.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > MRC/CSO SPHSU
Journal Name:Preventive Medicine
Publisher:Elsevier
ISSN:0091-7435
ISSN (Online):1096-0260
Published Online:27 December 2017
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2018 The Authors
First Published:First published in Preventive Medicine 108: 17-22
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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Project Code
Award No
Project Name
Principal Investigator
Funder's Name
Funder Ref
Lead Dept
1
Informing Healthy Public Policy
Peter Craig
MC_UU_12017/15
HW - MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit
1
Measuring and Analysing Socioeconomic Inequalities in Health
Alastair Leyland
MC_UU_12017/13
HW - MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit
2
Understanding the impacts of welfare policy on health: A novel data linkage study
Srinivasa Katikireddi
SCAF/15/02
IHW - MRC/CSO SPHU

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