Abstract

Purpose

The growing burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) requires effective public policy to change systems instead of individuals and create supportive contexts that reduce NCDs and health inequity. A major determinant of disease reduction is physical activity (PA). Many countries have policies in place, but the implementation of those policies is unknown. This presentation will show how Germany, Ireland, Lithuania, Netherlands, Poland and Romania are collaborating to gather data to benchmark the extent of implementation of their PA policies and their health equity impact.

Methods

An innovative tool, the PA-Environment Policy Index for Equity (PA-EPIQ) will be developed and used to test and promote policy benchmarking as a tool to improve policy implementation in six countries. This will involve mixed methods including evidence synthesis, document analysis and case reports to ‘evidence ground’ countries’ policy implementation status in relevant domains, e.g. health, sport, education, transport. Quantitative and qualitative evidence validation with policymakers will ensure the comprehensive representation of government action. While engagement with stakeholders – both experts and citizens – from each country will independently assess the evidence on their governments’ action, comparing it to international best practice.

Results

IMPAQT will generate six country-specific policy index scores, which will be translated into report cards containing critical implementation gaps and policy recommendations for each country. It will also bring the individual country reports together and create a unified report for citizens, scientific communities, and policymakers.

Conclusions

IMPAQT is based on scientific research as well as the involvement of policymakers, experts and citizens through a co-production approach in 6 EU countries. Transnational comparisons will provide international benchmarks to support policymakers in enhancing health equity in PA policy development.

Support/Funding Source

ERA4Health, GA N° 101095426 of the EU Horizon Europe Research and Innovation Programme

This content is only available as a PDF.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Comments

0 Comments
Submit a comment
You have entered an invalid code
Thank you for submitting a comment on this article. Your comment will be reviewed and published at the journal's discretion. Please check for further notifications by email.