Capturing the complexity of evaluations of health promotion interventions: A scoping review

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Abstract

Evaluation designs that can capture the complexity of health promotion (HP ) interventions are needed. Our objective was to assess if such evaluations use a Complex Adaptive Systems (CAS) perspective, by using a scoping review of evaluations of HP interventions concerning alcohol and tobacco use in the peer-reviewed (PR) and grey literature (GL). We developed indicator questions to assess CAS aspects. Our study revealed that none of the 45 PR and 9 GL evaluations that we reviewed explicitly used a CAS perspective; however, most indirectly assessed complexity aspects. Our indicator questions are a step toward addressing the challenges of the practical application of a CAS perspective. Copyright © 2012 Canadian Evaluation Society.

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APA

Kania, A., Patel, A. B., Roy, A., Yelland, G. S., Nguyen, D. T. K., & Verhoef, M. J. (2013). Capturing the complexity of evaluations of health promotion interventions: A scoping review. Canadian Journal of Program Evaluation. https://doi.org/10.3138/cjpe.027.003

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