Co-producing evidence-informed criminal legal re-entry policy with the community: an application of policy codesign

Author:

Owens Mandy D.1,Ngo Sally1,Grinnell Sue2,Pearlman Dana3,Bekemeier Betty1,Walker Sarah Cusworth1

Affiliation:

1. University of Washington, USA

2. Public Health Institute, USA

3. Santa Rosa, USA

Abstract

Background:Not attending to local political climate negatively impacts the implementation and sustainability of evidence-informed models of health service. Policy codesign aims to align policy, systems, and community from the ‘ground up’, with structured information gathering, synthesis and creative design methods that incorporate relevant scientific evidence. Aims and objectives:This paper provides an example of policy codesign to develop a jail-based re-entry programme for adults with opioid use disorder in a rural county in the US. Methods:The design process adapted Theory U, a systems planning framework to include a rapid evidence review. The process included five sessions from July-September 2020. Mixed methods were used to collect data from the design team (n=5), community at large (n=10), and potential consumers (n=14). Qualitative and descriptive analyses assessed satisfaction with the design process, and the acceptability and perceived feasibility of programme implementation. Findings:Satisfaction with the design process was high among design team members. Acceptability and perceived feasibility of the designed programme were ‘very high’ across all respondents. The community implemented the designed programme, which aligned with the extant evidence base, although design team members did not explicitly acknowledge research as a source of design. This suggests that the process achieved creative control, and qualitative findings support the teams’ sense of shared ownership. Discussion and conclusions:Policy codesign is a promising strategy for integrating the evidence base with community creativity in policy and systems-level planning. Further research is needed to understand which elements optimised design members’ absorption of the evidence base, shared sense making, and creative control.

Funder

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Washington and Anthem/Amerigroup

Publisher

Bristol University Press

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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