Effective Sexual Health Interventions: Issues in Experimental Evaluation - Rilegato

 
9780198508496: Effective Sexual Health Interventions: Issues in Experimental Evaluation

Sinossi

The growing importance of the evidence-based movement has made experimental evaluation a key issue among researchers, practitioners, commissioners and policy makers. However, experimental evaluation remains controversial in the sexual health field. This partly reflects the diversity of groups involved in this area and their different views on the most appropriate research methods. This book provides an analysis of the methodological and practical issues involved in evaluating sexual health interventions.

The book will appeal to trial enthusiasts through discussion of specific issues in trial design, and also to those with a sceptical interest in the potential of experimentation and its appropriateness or feasibility. It is concerned with methodology rather than the substantive findings of research, and considers the requirements of research in both developed and developing countries. The focus of the book is on sexual health interventions, although many of the issues are equally applicable to other areas of behavioural and social research

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Recensione

A major strength of this book is its international scope . . . It should now become required reading for those planning or seeking funding for complex sexual health interventions. (International Journal of Epidemiology, 33)

... specifically of interest to those researching sexual health interventions from the social science perspective... many of the arguments and examples used are interesting, relevant and wide-ranging... Globally sexual health is poorly resourced and evaluation is essential for the future to maximise cost-effectiveness and to prevent useless or harmful interventions continuing to be deployed. (Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh)

Contenuti

  • Section 1 - To experiment or not?
  • 1: Chris Bonnell, Rebecca Bennett & Ann Oakley: Sexual health interventions should be subject to experimental evaluation
  • 2: Susan Kippax: Sexual health interventions are unsuitable for experimental evaluation
  • 3: David A. Ross & Daniel Wight: The role of randomized controlled trials in assessing sexual health interventions
  • Section 2 - Methodological issues in the experimental evaluation of sexual health interventions
  • 4: Stephen Sutton: Using theories of behaviour change to develop and evaluate sexual health interventions
  • 5: Irwin Nazareth: Stages in the development and evaluation of complex interventions
  • 6: Sheila Bird: Choice of experimental design
  • 7: Richard Hayes: Cluster randomized trials of sexual health interventions
  • 8: Frances M. Cowan & Mary Plummer: Biological, behavioural and psychosocial outcome measures
  • 9: Rochelle N. Shain, Sondra Perdue, Jeanna M. Piper, Alan E.C. Holden & Jane Champion: Developing and validating complex behavioural outcome measures
  • 10: Daniel Wight & Angela Obasi: Unpacking the 'black box': the importance of process data to explain outcomes
  • Section 3 - What happens after a trial is completed?
  • 11: Heiner Grosskurth & Lilani Kumaranayake: Generalizability of trials and implementation of research into practice
  • 12: Graham Hart & Jonathan Elford: The limits of generalizability: community-based sexual health interventions among gay men
  • 13: Jonathan Shepherd & Angela Harden: The value of systematic reviews of the effectiveness of sexual health interventions
  • 14: Judith Stephenson: Challenges for future sexual health intervention trials

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