1 / 20

A Comparison of 42 Local, National, and International HIA Guidelines

A Comparison of 42 Local, National, and International HIA Guidelines. Andrew L. Dannenberg, MD, MPH Katherine Hebert, MCRP Arthur M. Wendel, MD, MPH Sarah H. Kennedy, MPH Healthy Community Design Initiative Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA

Download Presentation

A Comparison of 42 Local, National, and International HIA Guidelines

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Comparison of 42 Local, National, and InternationalHIA Guidelines Andrew L. Dannenberg, MD, MPH Katherine Hebert, MCRP Arthur M. Wendel, MD, MPH Sarah H. Kennedy, MPH Healthy Community Design Initiative Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA International Health Impact Assessment Conference Granada, Spain, April 2011

  2. Background • HIAs have been conducted for 20+ years • No one standard procedure established • Many guidelines developed over past decade • This study reviews existing guidelines • Builds on prior work by Mindel et al

  3. Methods • Search for existing HIA guidelines • Authors’ knowledge of existing guidelines • HIA Gateway, HIA Connect, IMPACT, WHO, and others • 2008 article by Mindell et al* • Networking with HIA colleagues • Literature search *Mindell JS et al. A review of health impact assessment frameworks. Public Health. 2008; 122:1177-1187

  4. Methods (continued) • Inclusion: • Intent of document to guide HIA conduct • Exclusion: • Old guide for which newer version available • Sector-specific (eg, only for mining or for greenspace) • Step-specific (eg, describes only screening step) • Extract key information from documents

  5. Number of HIA Guides by Year of Publication (N=40*) Year *Date not available for two guides

  6. HIA Guides by Number of Pages (N=42) Number of pages Median 34, range 4 - 198 pages

  7. Source of HIA Guidelinesby Region (n=42) International (WHO, etc) N= 4 UK and Ireland N = 16 Rest of Europe N = 7 Australasia N = 7 North America N = 7 Asia N = 1

  8. HIA Guidelines by Source (n=42) Government agency N= 16 Working group, council, board or committee N= 10 Academic institute N= 7 Public or private sector health organization or association N= 5 International agency N= 4

  9. Specific Features of 42 HIA Guidelines

  10. Steps Described in 42 HIA Guidelines

  11. Screening • Describes selection process for projects and policies that should undergo an HIA (95%) • Intended to be a quick and efficient process (69%) • Includes a checklist of questions to be transparent in proposal selection (64%) • Indicates availability of specific screening step tools

  12. Scoping • Describes process for establishing a framework or work plan and selecting impacts to study (98%) • Identifies which level or type of HIA to conduct (69%) • Sets geographic and population boundaries (90%) • Identifies stakeholders and/or forms a steering committee (93%)

  13. Assessment • Describes step as quantitative and qualitative methods to organize information on current population status and possible health impacts (100%) • Prioritizes potential impacts based on strength of evidence, likelihood and scale of impact, contribution to reducing inequalities, and relevance (74%) • Includes a tool for prioritizing impacts/ organizing information (60%)

  14. Recommendations • Describes step as formulating ways to improve a proposal to maximize positive health impacts and minimize negative impacts (100%) • States that recommendations should be practicable, achievable, acceptable to stakeholders, and supported by evidence (76%) • May include a detailed Health Action Plan

  15. Reporting • Step described as providing stakeholders and decision-makers with information about the process, findings, and recommendations of the HIA (95%) • May provide guidance on what to include in a report and on matching type of report to type of audience

  16. Monitoring/Evaluation • Step described as reflecting on the HIA process, impact, and health outcomes (86%) • Considered an important step to building the HIA field (71%) • Recommends talking with decision-makers as part of evaluation

  17. Study Limitations • Some guidelines may have been missed in search • Predetermined terminology in search and in analysis may have reduced diversity of findings • Components of guidelines may be interpreted differently by different users

  18. Conclusions • Guidelines for HIAs are similar in many areas of the world although some variations exist • How closely the practice of HIA follows the published guidelines is unknown • Further work is needed to determine if one set of common guidelines could be written for use in numerous countries and regions

  19. Join the HIA Community of Practice! Go to www.phconnect.org to become a member and find the HIA Community of Practice

  20. Health Impact Assessments can help guide choices to promote human health www.cdc.gov/healthyplaces www.healthimpactproject.org

More Related