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How far can systematic reviews inform policy development for wicked rural health service problems?

Journal

AUSTRALIAN HEALTH REVIEW
Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages 592-600

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/AH090592

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Funding

  1. Australian Primary Health Care Research Institute

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Policy makers and researchers increasingly look to systematic reviews as a means of connecting research and evidence more effectively with policy. Based on Australian research into rural and remote primary health care services, we note some concerns regarding the suitability of systematic review methods when applied to such settings. It suggests that rural and other health services are highly complex and researching them is akin to dealing with wicked problems. It proposes that the notion of wicked problems may inform our understanding of the issues and our choice of appropriate methods to inform health service policy. Key issues including the complexity of health services, methodological limitations of traditional reviews, the nature of materials under review, and the importance of the service context are highlighted. These indicate the need for broader approaches to capturing relevant evidence. Sustained, collaborative synthesis in which complexity, ambiguity and context is acknowledged is proposed as a way of addressing the wicked nature of these issues. Aust Health Rev 2009: 33(4): 592-600

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