4.5 Article

Global research priorities for interpersonal violence prevention: a modified Delphi study

Journal

BULLETIN OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
Volume 95, Issue 1, Pages 36-48

Publisher

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
DOI: 10.2471/BLT.16.172965

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of South Africa
  2. Chedoke Health Chair in Child Psychiatry
  3. Public Health Agency of Canada
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research

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Objective To establish global research priorities for interpersonal violence prevention using a systematic approach. Methods Research priorities were identified in a three-round process involving two surveys. In round 1, 95 global experts in violence prevention proposed research questions to be ranked in round 2. Questions were collated and organized according to the four-step public health approach to violence prevention. In round 2, 280 international experts ranked the importance of research in the four steps, and the various substeps, of the public health approach. In round 3, 131 international experts ranked the importance of detailed research questions on the public health step awarded the highest priority in round 2. Findings In round 2, developing, implementing and evaluating interventions was the step of the public health approach awarded the highest priority for four of the six types of violence considered (i.e. child maltreatment, intimate partner violence, armed violence and sexual violence) but not for youth violence or elder abuse. In contrast, scaling up interventions and evaluating their cost effectiveness was ranked lowest for all types of violence. In round 3, research into developing, implementing and evaluating, interventions that addressed parenting or laws to regulate the use of firearms was awarded the highest priority. The key limitations of the study were response and attrition rates among survey respondents. However, these rates were in line with similar priority-setting exercises. Conclusion These findings suggest it is premature to scale up violence prevention interventions. Developing and evaluating smaller-scale interventions should be the funding priority.

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