Authors:
Gabriella M McLoughlin, Shiriki Kumanyika, Yanfang Su, Ross C Brownson, Jennifer O Fisher, & Karen M Emmons
University of Washington affiliated authors are displayed in bold.
✪ Open Access
Published: March 2024
Read the full text in the open access journal Translational Behavioral Medicine
Abstract:
Policies represent a key opportunity to improve the health outcomes of populations, and if implemented well, can reduce disparities affecting marginalized populations. Many policies are only evaluated on whether they elicit their intended health outcome. However, a lack of understanding regarding if and how they are implemented may hinder the intended impact overall and on addressing health disparities. Implementation science offers an array of frameworks and methodological approaches for assessing policy delivery, yet few examples exist that meaningfully include health equity as a core focus.
This commentary describes the importance of equity-informed implementation measurement by providing case examples and implications for assessment. In addition, we highlight examples of emerging work in policy implementation grounded in health equity with suggested steps for moving the field forward. The ultimate goal is to move toward open-access measurement approaches that can be adapted to study implementation of a variety of policies at different stages of implementation, driven by input from marginalized populations and implementation practitioners, to move the needle on addressing health disparities.
**This abstract is posted with permission under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License**