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National Prevention Research Partnership: Actionable Strategies for NCD Prevention

The National Prevention Research Partnership (NPRP) aims to bridge the gap in prevention research in the UK by funding multidisciplinary teams focused on primary prevention of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). With a focus on population-level interventions and cost-effectiveness, the partnership aims to develop scalable and sustainable solutions to reduce health inequalities and improve population health.

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National Prevention Research Partnership: Actionable Strategies for NCD Prevention

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  1. UK Prevention Research Partnership Professor Dame Sally Macintyre Chair, UKPRP Expert Review Group and UKPRP Scientific Advisory Board 24 September 2019

  2. Why prevention? • Under investment in prevention research across the UK • The need to address the burden and costs of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in the UK • Cost effectiveness of prevention • Common drivers of NCDs, therefore co-benefits of acting on those drivers • The need to develop realistic, actionable, sustainable approaches to NCD prevention • Recognising that research funders should work together to address problems beyond their individual remits

  3. National Prevention Research Initiative (NPRI) • Four funding calls between 2005 and 2011 • £34m supported 74 primary prevention research projects • Focused on alcohol, smoking, diet and physical activity • NPRI 2015 review identified a need to: • focus on population-level interventions • work on the cost-effectiveness of prevention strategies • solve problems rather than simply describing them • understand the mechanisms of action • improve health where need is disproportionate: mental health, low SES, minorities

  4. Academy of Medical Sciences 2016 report • Report emphasised the importance of prevention research • Identified challenges and opportunities for research into preventing NCDs and reducing inequalities in health • Considered different environments which influence health and health behaviours • Identified limitations of current biomedical approaches to solving major prevention problems • Recognised that multi-disciplinarity and systems-levels approaches needed

  5. The Partnership • UK charities, UKRI Councils and health and social care departments • Invest £55m over 6-7 years (through 2 funding calls) • Covers physical and mental health and wellbeing in the UK

  6. Objectives • Produce robust new knowledge about actionable, cost effective and scalable ways to improve population health and reduce inequalities in health • Provide substantial long-term investment to bring together a wide range of disciplines and stakeholders to build multidisciplinary teams focused on the primary prevention of NCDs • Enable change within complex systems to prevent NCDs • Co-develop ideas and research programmes with end users • Capitalise on emerging technologies, big data etc. • Support methodological innovation • Promote coordination of prevention research across funders

  7. Focus • NCDs, not infectious disease • Upstream, population level, determinants • Primary prevention • Best ways of modifying common drivers for a number of NCDs • Solving problems rather than describing them • Improving the development and evaluation of preventive strategies • Understanding issues of transferability: context, settings, environments • Improved targeting • Cost effective, scalable and sustainable solutions • Reducing health inequalities • Studying existing as well as proposed new preventive strategies

  8. Prevention research post-NPRI: focus on upstream health determinants

  9. Upstream influences and complexity Swinburn et al. (2011) The Lancet 378 (9793): 804-814

  10. Inter-disciplinarity • Developing effective preventive strategies requires understanding complex systems and their inter-linkages • UKPRP believes this can best be achieved through interdisciplinary research • UKPRP keen to see genuinely multidisciplinary teams, if appropriate bringing in disciplines not typically engaged in disease prevention research • The Partnership is not prescriptive about what disciplines should be included • Disciplinary mix should be appropriate to the research question

  11. Co-develop research programmes • Co-develop ideas, research questions, evidence and implementation of strategies to maximise impact • Users of evidence and those with experience of implementing interventions, e.g. • Local Authorities, Local Government Association • Government Departments / Agencies • Third sector, civil society groups – charities and professional groups • Practitioners • Communities • Industry • Co-development with users is essential and should be appropriate to the work

  12. Methodological approaches • Funded groups can use and/or develop a diverse range of methods • Methods must be appropriate to the research questions • Systems thinking and systems science approaches particularly welcomed • Exploiting digital technologies, social media, or large-scale datasets

  13. Knowledge brokering • Knowledge transfer and exchange will be an integral aspects of the UKPRP: • to enable the transfer of outputs into policy and practice • to foster the development of long-lasting relationships between researchers and users • Mechanisms must be appropriate to the topic

  14. Call 1 – outcome (consortia)

  15. Call 1 – outcome (networks)

  16. Call 2 – Scope; Particular priorities Aim to have a balanced portfolio complementing Call 1 funding • Preventing poor mental health and promoting mental wellbeing • Reducing health inequalities as a primary focus • Using fiscal and economic strategies to prevent NCDs and reduce health inequalities • Modifying other social and economic determinants of health and wellbeing • Tackling food systems that perpetuate unhealthy diets and obesity • Improving the urban environment, including transport systems and air quality • Using green and blue spaces for improving population health and preventing NCDs • Targeting specific life course stages or transitions

  17. What we’re looking for / “What good looks like” • Dealing with important (high burden/prevalence) NCDs • Dealing with important drivers of those NCDs • Realistic, ambitious, original, good value, excellent research • Providing concrete and explicit accounts of: • What activities will be conducted if funded • What is already known about the specific topic, and what these activities will add • The mechanisms by which these activities are likely to effect change in drivers of NCDs • The appropriateness of the proposed: • membership of consortia/networks • networking strategies • methods • disciplines • user partnerships • knowledge brokering plans

  18. In summary, the UKPRP will: • fund research into the primary prevention of physical and mental NCDs • generate useful new knowledge about how to prevent NCDs • encourage an upstream, and whole systems, approach to prevention • provide substantial long-term investment to develop and build on basic research in a number of relevant disciplines • build ambitious new multidisciplinary teams and researcher networks • engage with stakeholders at every stage to produce clear answers relevant to decision makers • capitalise on emerging digital technologies, ‘big data’ and basic science

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