Article review: Anticipating and assessing adverse and other unintended consequences of public health interventions using the CONSEQUENT framework

  • Iván Devosa Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church Faculty of Pedagogy, Kecskemét, Hungary
Keywords: public health interventions, adverse and unintended consequences, decision-makers, framework

Abstract

Despite the best intentions, public health interventions can have negative and unintended consequences. These consequences are rarely systematically examined in the development, evaluation or implementation of public health interventions.

References

Rehfuess, E. A., Stratil, J. M., Scheel, I. B., Portela, A., Norris, S. L., & Baltussen, R. (2019). The WHO-INTEGRATE evidence to decision framework version 1.0: integrating WHO norms and values and a complexity perspective. BMJ Global Health, 4(Suppl 1), e000844.

Michie, S., Van Stralen, M. M., & West, R. (2011). The behaviour change wheel: a new method for characterising and designing behaviour change interventions. Implementation science, 6, 1-12.

Stratil, J. M., Biallas, R. L., Movsisyan, A., Oliver, K., & Rehfuess, E. A. (2023). Anticipating and assessing adverse and other unintended consequences of public health interventions: the (CONSEQUENT) framework. medRxiv, 2023-02. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.02.03.23285408

Published
2024-09-16
How to Cite
DevosaI. (2024). Article review: Anticipating and assessing adverse and other unintended consequences of public health interventions using the CONSEQUENT framework. Multidisciplinary Health & Wellbeing, 2(3), 27-30. https://doi.org/10.58701/mej.15839
Section
Short Reviews