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dc.contributor.authorRowbotham, Sam
dc.date.accessioned2017-04-12
dc.date.available2017-04-12
dc.date.issued2017-04-11
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2123/16629
dc.descriptionUnderstanding and monitoring the delivery of population health interventions, is a key concern for researchers, practitioners and policy makers, particularly in terms of what ‘dose’ is required to achieve the desire outcomes. While dose is commonly understood to refer to ‘how much’ of an intervention is delivered, this concept is potentially problematic for multi-component interventions delivered at the population level (e.g. urban planning interventions) and dose appears to have been operationalised in a variety of ways across different types of interventions.en
dc.description.abstractHow has ‘dose’ been defined and operationalized across a range of health promotion/disease prevention interventions?en
dc.subjectdoseen
dc.subjectimplementationen
dc.subjectinterventionen
dc.subjectmonitoringen
dc.subjectpreventionen
dc.titleOperationalising ‘dose’ in public health interventions A scoping reviewen
dc.typePresentationen
usyd.facultyUniversity hosted conferences
usyd.departmentMenzies Centre for Health Policyen


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