Using Random Allocation to Evaluate Social Interventions: Three Recent U.K. Examples

Author:

Oakley Ann1,Strange Vicki2,Toroyan Tami3,Wiggins Meg2,Roberts Ian4,Stephenson Judith5

Affiliation:

1. Social Science Research Unit at the University of London Institute of Education

2. Social Science Research Unit, University of London Institute of Education

3. Public Health Intervention Research Unit at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

4. University of Auckland, New Zealand, and at McGill University, Canada

5. Department of Sexually Transmitted Diseases at the Royal Free and University College Medical School

Abstract

Although widely accepted in medicine and health services research, randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are often viewed with hostility by social scientists, who cite a variety of reasons as to why this approach to evaluation cannot be used to research social interventions. This article discusses the three central themes in these debates, which are those of science, ethics, and feasibility. The article uses three recent U.K. trials of social interventions (day care for preschool children, social support for disadvantaged families, and peer-led sex education for young people) to consider issues relating to the use of random allocation for social intervention evaluation and to suggest some practical strategies for the successful implementation of “social” RCTs. The article argues that the criteria of science, ethics, and feasibility can and should apply to social intervention trials in just the same way as they do to clinical trials.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science

Reference27 articles.

1. Framework for design and evaluation of complex interventions to improve health

2. Assembling Comparison Groups to Assess the Effects of Health care

3. Selecting a Control Group

4. Interventions to reduce unintended pregnancies among adolescents: systematic review of randomised controlled trials

5. Edwards, Sarah J. L., R. J. Lilford, and J. Hewison. 1998. The ethics of randomised controlled trials from the perspectives of patients, the public, and healthcare professionals . British Medical Journal 317: 1209-1212 .

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