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Complex interventions: how "out of control" can a randomised controlled trial be?

Penelope Hawe, +2 more
- 24 Jun 2004 - 
- Vol. 328, Iss: 7455, pp 1561-1563
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TLDR
A radical departure from the way large scale interventions are typically conceptualised is proposed, which could liberate interventions to be responsive to local context and potentially more effective while still allowing meaningful evaluation in controlled designs.
Abstract
Complex interventions are more than the sum of their parts, and interventions need to be better theorised to reflect this Many people think that standardisation and randomised controlled trials go hand in hand. Having an intervention look the same as possible in different places is thought to be paramount. But this may be why some community interventions have had weak effects. We propose a radical departure from the way large scale interventions are typically conceptualised. This could liberate interventions to be responsive to local context and potentially more effective while still allowing meaningful evaluation in controlled designs. The key lies in looking past the simple elements of a system to embrace complex system functions and processes. The suitability of cluster randomised trials for evaluating interventions directed at whole communities or organisations remains vexed.1 It need not be.2 Some health promotion advocates (including the WHO European working group on health promotion evaluation) believe randomised controlled trials are inappropriate because of the perceived requirement for interventions in different sites to be standardised or look the same.1 3 4 They have abandoned randomised trials because they think context level adaptation, which is essential for interventions to work, is precluded by trial designs. An example of context level adaptation might be adjusting educational materials to suit various local learning styles and literacy levels. Lead thinkers in complex interventions, such as the UK's Medical Research Council, also think that trials of complex interventions must “consistently provide as close to the same intervention as possible” by “standardising the content and delivery of the intervention.”5 By contrast, however, they do not see this as a reason to reject randomised controlled trials. These divergent views have led to problems on two fronts. Firstly, the field of health promotion is being turned away from randomised …

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The cultural adaptation of prevention interventions: resolving tensions between fidelity and fit.

TL;DR: This paper examines this complex programmatic issue from a community-based participatory research approach for program adaptation that emphasizes motivating community participation to enhance program outcomes.
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Efficacy and Effectiveness Trials (and Other Phases of Research) in the Development of Health Promotion Programs

TL;DR: The concepts of efficacy and effectiveness are examined from the viewpoints of the traditions and philosophies of health-care research and social program evaluation, and eight phases of research are suggested for the development of health promotion programs.
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Evaluating Health Promotion—Progress, Problems and solutions

TL;DR: The article concludes that the four key challenges to the evaluation of health promotion are 1) using research evidence more systematically while planning activities 2) improving the definition and measurement of outcome 3) adopting an appropriate evaluation intensity and 4) adopting a appropriate evaluation design.
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Would-Be Worlds: How Simulation Is Changing the Frontiers of Science

TL;DR: In Would-Be Worlds, acclaimed author John Casti takes readers on a fascinating excursion through a number of remarkable silicon microworlds and probes the answers to a host of profound questions these "would-be worlds" raise about the new science of simulation.
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