Categories
evaluation Healthy Settings Licensing Planning

Public health practitioners’ views of the ‘Making Every Contact Count’ initiative and standards for its evaluation

Chisholm, A. et al. Journal of Public Health, 2018: doi.org/10.1093/pubmed/fdy094

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Background
National Health Service England encourages staff to use everyday interactions with patients to discuss healthy lifestyle changes as part of the ‘Making Every Contact Count’ (MECC) approach. Although healthcare, government and public health organisations are now expected to adopt this approach, evidence is lacking about how MECC is currently implemented in practice. This study explored the views and experiences of those involved in designing, delivering and evaluating MECC.

Methods
We conducted a qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with 13 public health practitioners with a range of roles in implementing MECC across England. Interviews were conducted via telephone, transcribed verbatim and analysed using an inductive thematic approach.

Results
Four key themes emerged identifying factors accounting for variations in MECC implementation: (i) ‘design, quality and breadth of training’, (ii) ‘outcomes attended to and measured’, (iii) ‘engagement levels of trainees and trainers’ and (iv) ‘system-level influences’.

Conclusions
MECC is considered a valuable public health approach but because organisations interpret MECC differently, staff training varies in nature. Practitioners believe that implementation can be improved, and an evidence-base underpinning MECC developed, by sharing experiences more widely, introducing standardization to staff training and finding better methods for assessing meaningful outcomes.

Categories
Children CYP Healthcare Nutrition Obesity

Childhood obesity: time for action

By House of Commons Health Committee (2018)

The government is expected to publish shortly a refreshed version of the childhood obesity plan first published in summer 2016. This report calls for an effective childhood obesity plan with a joined-up, whole systems approach and one that focuses particularly on tackling the ever-widening health inequality due to childhood obesity between the richest and poorest area.

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Categories
Infection Control infection prevention

Essential Practice for Infection Prevention and Control Guidance for nursing staff

By Royal College of Nursing (2017)

This publication provides important information and guidance on the essential principles of infection prevention and control and highlights why other issues, such as nutrition and hydration, should be viewed as an essential complementary component of nursing practice. This guidance is not intended as an in-depth reference document, but instead provides an overview of the core elements and rationale for infection prevention practice and associated
activities. It is applicable to all nurses, midwives and health care assistants, regardless of their practice setting.

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Categories
Library

Health economics: a guide for public health teams

By Public Health England (2018)

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Resources to help local commissioners achieve value for money by estimating the return on investment (ROI) and cost-effectiveness of public health programmes. There are various resources including:

The cost-effectiveness of specific topic areas

PHE’s Health Economics team has produced a number of resources which can be used to estimate the value of investing in prevention and early diagnosis in your area. They pull together the best available evidence on costs, savings, and health benefits for specific topic areas in a single place, thus simplifying the process of commissioning cost-effective services.

The interactive tools produced by PHE are: