Title: Health Needs Assessment
1Health Needs Assessment
- Dr Christine Hine, Consultant in Public Health,
- Bristol South Gloucestershire PCTs
- Glen Monks
- NTA Regional Manager, South West
2What is health needs assessment?
- ..a systematic method of identifying unmet health
and healthcare needs of a population. - ..and making changes to meet these unmet needs
- (J Wright in Oxford Handbook of
- Public Health Practice, 2001)
3- the purpose .is to gather information required
to bring about change beneficial to the health of
the population. - within finite resources.
- Health gain can be achieved by reallocating
resources. - (A Stevens, S Gillam.BMJ 19983161448-1452)
4Need
- Need for health
- Need for health intervention not only is there
need, there is also real potential to benefit
from an intervention.
5Evidence based policy making is about taking
decisions based on evidence and the needs and
values of the population J A Muir
Gray, programme director, UK National Screening
Committee
..decisions are based on evidence and not made
by evidence
BMJÂ Â 2004329988-989Â (30Â October),
6Example Cochlear implants for profound deafness
- A local hospital wants to offer a new highly
specialist service providing Cochlear Implants - Should funding be found to provide this service?
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9How might this model relate to needs assessment
and treatment planning?
- How does our system perform compared to (a)
national guidance (b) similar areas? - Who are the corporate stakeholders and how do
we best involve them? - What interventions are there/could there be?
advantages and disadvantages of each. - What data is routinely available to us?
- What data might we need to collect?
- What resources are available? (now and in future)
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11An applied example...
- Is there a need to increase the level of needle
exchange provision in Borchester DAAT?
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13Rapid appraisal
- A research method involving participation, data
gathering and analysis to gain understanding. - Not hypothesis testing
- Rural rapid appraisal started in 1970s, used in
aid programmes, agriculture. - Might involve key informant interviews, focus
groups,meetings,observations,small surveys, data
analysis. - Triangulation to improve validity compares
several info sources on the same issue
14Rapid appraisal- principles
- Data collected is relevant and appropriate to
purpose (quality and quantity) - Methods adapted to local conditions
- Involves members of the relevant communities in
defining needs and generating possible solutions
15Rapid appraisal - strengths
- Relatively low cost
- Quick
- Ownership by local people
- Flexible
- Revealing, can gain in-depth understanding of
complex issues - Multi-disciplinary, and encourages broader
perspectives.
16Rapid appraisal - limitations
- Bias e.g. no objective sampling technique
- Limited generalisability
- Decision makers may prefer statistics!
- Preparation takes time e.g. training community
interviewers - May seem intrusive to communities
17Rapid appraisal- references
- USAID Evaluation Publications, Published 1997
2000. http//www.dec.org/usaid_eval/ - (see number 5 for common methods, their
advantages and limitations) - Murray SA. Experiences with rapid appraisal in
primary care involving the public in assessing
health needs, orientating staff and education
medical students. BMJ 1999318440-4
http//bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/318/71
81/440