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How behavioural science can contribute to health partnerships: The case of The Change Exchange

Armitage, Christopher J.; Bull, Eleanor R.; Byrne-Davis, Lucie M.T.; Burton, Amy; Dharni, Nimarta; Gillison, Fiona; Maltinsky, Wendy; Mason, Corina; Sharma, Nisha; Johnston, Marie; Byrne, Ged J.; Hart, Jo K.

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Authors

Christopher J. Armitage

Eleanor R. Bull

Lucie M.T. Byrne-Davis

Amy Burton

Nimarta Dharni

Fiona Gillison

Wendy Maltinsky

Corina Mason

Marie Johnston

Ged J. Byrne

Jo K. Hart



Abstract

© 2017 The Author(s). Background: Health partnerships often use health professional training to change practice with the aim of improving quality of care. Interventions to change practice can learn from behavioural science and focus not only on improving the competence and capability of health professionals but also their opportunity and motivation to make changes in practice. We describe a project that used behavioural scientist volunteers to enable health partnerships to understand and use the theories, techniques and assessments of behavioural science. Case studies: This paper outlines how The Change Exchange, a collective of volunteer behavioural scientists, worked with health partnerships to strengthen their projects by translating behavioural science in situ. We describe three case studies in which behavioural scientists, embedded in health partnerships in Uganda, Sierra Leone and Mozambique, explored the behaviour change techniques used by educators, supported knowledge and skill development in behaviour change, monitored the impact of projects on psychological determinants of behaviour and made recommendations for future project developments. Discussion: Challenges in the work included having time and space for behavioural science in already very busy health partnership schedules and the difficulties in using certain methods in other cultures. Future work could explore other modes of translation and further develop methods to make them more culturally applicable. Conclusion: Behavioural scientists could translate behavioural science which was understood and used by the health partnerships to strengthen their project work.

Journal Article Type Review
Acceptance Date Jun 1, 2017
Publication Date Jun 12, 2017
Deposit Date Sep 1, 2017
Publicly Available Date Sep 1, 2017
Journal Globalization and Health
Electronic ISSN 1744-8603
Publisher BioMed Central
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 1
Pages 1-8
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12992-017-0254-4
Keywords behaviour, health partnerships, implementation science
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/886117
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1186/s12992-017-0254-4
Contract Date Sep 1, 2017

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