The Public Health Responsibility Deal: Using a Systems-Level Analysis to Understand the Lack of Impact on Alcohol, Food, Physical Activity, and Workplace Health Sub-Systems
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods and Materials
- (1)
- What are the causal pathways involved in the RD and how did they help or hinder it?
- (2)
- What were the RD structures, processes and interests at play?
- (3)
- What were the feedback loops, and did they suppress or potentiate effects of the RD on the outcomes of interest?
- (4)
- How resilient was the system to change and what was its ability to “absorb” externally directed change?
3. Results
3.1. What Were the Causal Pathways Involved, and How Did They Help or Hinder the Intervention (the Responsibility Deal)?
3.2. What Were the Responsibility Deal Structures, Processes and Interests at Play?
3.2.1. Structures Driving the RD
3.2.2. Organisations Involved and Their Rationale for Doing so
3.3. What Were the Feedback Loops and Did They Suppress or Potentiate Effects of the RD on the Outcomes of Interest?
3.4. How Resilient Was the System to Change and What was Its Ability to “Absorb” Externally Directed Change?
4. Discussion
4.1. The RD in the Context of the Wider Literature on Public-Private Partnerships
- (1)
- evidence-informed and rights-based targets that are in the interest of public health, and that are developed in a transparent manner and SMART in design (i.e., specific, measurable, attributable, realistic and time-bound);
- (2)
- independent, rigorous monitoring of compliance, progress and public health impact;
- (3)
- transparent reporting with clear consequences and independent measures of accountability to the government and to the public;
- (4)
- sufficient scope for impact, through the participation of leading corporate players and applied as widely as possible to cover the largest possible proportion of those exposed to risk of ill-health and the market.
- (5)
- range of contributors: “…self-regulatory regimes should have inputs from governments, scientists and civil society, particularly in target and standard-setting and ensuring accountability” [2].
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CLD | causal loop diagram |
PPP | public–private partnership |
RD | the Public Health Responsibility Deal |
SMART | specific, measurable, attributable, realistic, and time-bound |
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RD Evaluation Components | System Attributes which these Data Illuminate (Adapted from [20]) |
---|---|
Logic model built on initial description of how RD would work [23], and scoping review [12] | Causal pathways within the RD systems (food, alcohol, physical activity, health at work) |
Participant interviews [9] Analysis of organisational case studies including documents and interviews Media analysis [24] | Structures and processes in place Interests at play Feedback loops, and barriers to change |
Qualitative systems dynamic modelling [15,25,26] using Causal Loop Diagrams (as an analytic tool) [27] built on data from pledge analyses, progress report analyses, qualitative data from interviews and organisational case studies (created as part of the current paper) | Drivers, interests, ways of working |
Analysis of RD pledges [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,13,24] | |
Analyses of evidence base [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,13,24] | Probability of system changing in response to specific pledges |
Analyses of specific pledges [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,13,24] | Identifying whether change happened in a particular part of the system |
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Knai, C.; Petticrew, M.; Douglas, N.; Durand, M.A.; Eastmure, E.; Nolte, E.; Mays, N. The Public Health Responsibility Deal: Using a Systems-Level Analysis to Understand the Lack of Impact on Alcohol, Food, Physical Activity, and Workplace Health Sub-Systems. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 2895. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122895
Knai C, Petticrew M, Douglas N, Durand MA, Eastmure E, Nolte E, Mays N. The Public Health Responsibility Deal: Using a Systems-Level Analysis to Understand the Lack of Impact on Alcohol, Food, Physical Activity, and Workplace Health Sub-Systems. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(12):2895. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122895
Chicago/Turabian StyleKnai, Cécile, Mark Petticrew, Nick Douglas, Mary Alison Durand, Elizabeth Eastmure, Ellen Nolte, and Nicholas Mays. 2018. "The Public Health Responsibility Deal: Using a Systems-Level Analysis to Understand the Lack of Impact on Alcohol, Food, Physical Activity, and Workplace Health Sub-Systems" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 12: 2895. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122895
APA StyleKnai, C., Petticrew, M., Douglas, N., Durand, M. A., Eastmure, E., Nolte, E., & Mays, N. (2018). The Public Health Responsibility Deal: Using a Systems-Level Analysis to Understand the Lack of Impact on Alcohol, Food, Physical Activity, and Workplace Health Sub-Systems. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(12), 2895. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122895