Public Policy

Social Science and Health Service Delivery

March 28, 2017 1666

What drives health policy, health decisions, and health spending? More often than not, suggests Malcolm Grant, the chair of NHS England, the drivers are technology and work in the life sciences and medical sciences. But what drives many health outcomes? Again, more often than not, it’s behavior, whether by the individual or a serving practitioner.

That insight underlies a new initiative from the United Kingdom’s Campaign for Social Science titled Health of People, a follow-up to the campaign’s influential 2015 initiative, the Business of People.  Both People-powered  projects demonstrate the impact and the influence, both current and potential, of social science in the public sphere. A report on the latest initiative’s findings, The Health of People: How the social sciences can improve population health, will be released on April 5 with Grant delivering the keynote address.

The short video below, “Social Science and health service delivery,” outlines some of the reasons why the campaign, with the support of SAGE Publishing, the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry, the British Psychological Society, Cancer Research UK, the Society for the Study of Addiction, and Wellcome Trust embarked on this project. While its backers hope their message reaches government officials and policymakers from the PM’s office down to the local council, they  expect every segment of society will be touched by the recommendations in the report.

Grant says at least 8 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product goes toward healthcare, something he makes clear in the video that he sees less as a burden and more an investment in the future. Despite that substantial outlay, notes Susan Michie, chair of the Health of People project, the investment in healthcare, prevention and social care is being “massively squeezed,” and so the same amount of money need to do more for the public weal.

“We can get so far with biomedical investment,” she says, “ but that investment is wasted if we don’t so the social science research to show how do we get people to adhere to this expensive medication or accept these expensive medications. “

Social scientists, armed with evidence and with theory, can provide real relief, argues Dr. Tim Chadborn, the lead researcher into behavioral insights at Public Health England, “We can increase the efficiency of what we can do [through] better design of our interventions, our services, our policies, so that’s where I think the behavioral sciences and a better understanding of human behavior can help.”

“This report is long overdue, actually,” says Grant, “and in my view will do quite a bit to change thinking around the role of social sciences in health care.”

**

The release event for the Health of People report is at 6pm Wednesday, April  5 at Nesta, 58 Victoria Embankment, London. Please contact Daniela Puska to apply for a space.


Related Articles

Canada’s Storytellers Challenge Seeks Compelling Narratives About Student Research
Communication
November 21, 2024

Canada’s Storytellers Challenge Seeks Compelling Narratives About Student Research

Read Now
Deciphering the Mystery of the Working-Class Voter: A View From Britain
Insights
November 14, 2024

Deciphering the Mystery of the Working-Class Voter: A View From Britain

Read Now
Doing the Math on Equal Pay
Insights
November 8, 2024

Doing the Math on Equal Pay

Read Now
Tom Burns, 1959-2024: A Pioneer in Learning Development 
Impact
November 5, 2024

Tom Burns, 1959-2024: A Pioneer in Learning Development 

Read Now
All Change! 2024 – A Year of Elections: Campaign for Social Science Annual Sage Lecture

All Change! 2024 – A Year of Elections: Campaign for Social Science Annual Sage Lecture

With over 50 countries around the world holding major elections during 2024 it has been a hugely significant year for democracy as […]

Read Now
‘Settler Colonialism’ and the Promised Land

‘Settler Colonialism’ and the Promised Land

The term ‘settler colonialism’ was coined by an Australian historian in the 1960s to describe the occupation of a territory with a […]

Read Now
Research Assessment, Scientometrics, and Qualitative v. Quantitative Measures

Research Assessment, Scientometrics, and Qualitative v. Quantitative Measures

The creation of the Coalition for Advancing Research Assessment (CoARA) has led to a heated debate on the balance between peer review and evaluative metrics in research assessment regimes. Luciana Balboa, Elizabeth Gadd, Eva Mendez, Janne Pölönen, Karen Stroobants, Erzsebet Toth Cithra and the CoARA Steering Board address these arguments and state CoARA’s commitment to finding ways in which peer review and bibliometrics can be used together responsibly.

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments