ERIC Number: EJ1182747
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2018-May
Pages: 21
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: ISSN-1744-2648
EISSN: N/A
Right Here Right Now (RHRN) Pilot Study: Testing a Method of Near-Real-Time Data Collection on the Social Determinants of Health
Naven, Lynn; Inglis, Greig; Harris, Rachel; Fergie, Gillian; Teal, Gemma; Phipps, Rebecca; Stewart, Sally; Kelly, Lorna; Hilton, Shona; Smith, Madeline; McCartney, Gerry; Walsh, David; Tolan, Matthew; Egan, James
Evidence & Policy: A Journal of Research, Debate and Practice, v14 n2 p301-321 May 2018
Background: Informing policy and practice with up-to-date evidence on the social determinants of health is an ongoing challenge. One limitation of traditional approaches is the time-lag between identification of a policy or practice need and availability of results. The Right Here Right Now (RHRN) study piloted a near-real-time data-collection process to investigate whether this gap could be bridged. Methods: A website was developed to facilitate the issue of questions, data capture and presentation of findings. Respondents were recruited using two distinct methods--a clustered random probability sample, and a quota sample from street stalls. Weekly four-part questions were issued by email, Short Messaging Service (SMS or text) or post. Quantitative data were descriptively summarised, qualitative data thematically analysed, and a summary report circulated two weeks after each question was issued. The pilot spanned 26 weeks. Results: It proved possible to recruit and retain a panel of respondents providing quantitative and qualitative data on a range of issues. The samples were subject to similar recruitment and response biases as more traditional data-collection approaches. Participants valued the potential to influence change, and stakeholders were enthusiastic about the findings generated, despite reservations about the lack of sample representativeness. Stakeholders acknowledged that decision-making processes are not flexible enough to respond to weekly evidence. Conclusion: RHRN produced a process for collecting near-real-time data for policy-relevant topics, although obtaining and maintaining representative samples was problematic. Adaptations were identified to inform a more sustainable model of near-real-time data collection and dissemination in the future.
Descriptors: Pilot Projects, Data Collection, Social Influences, Health, Recruitment, Sampling, Questionnaires, Electronic Mail, Written Language, Telecommunications, Stakeholders, Decision Making, Statistical Analysis
Policy Press. University of Bristol, 1-9 Old Park Hill, Bristol BS2 8BB, UK. Tel: +44-117-954-5940; e-mail: pp-info@policypress.co.uk; Web site: https://policypress.co.uk/journals/evidence-and-policy
Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research
Education Level: N/A
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: N/A
Authoring Institution: N/A
Grant or Contract Numbers: N/A