Developing and Evaluating Complex Interventions - F2F (fully booked)
Date:
05/11/2024 - 07/11/2024
Organised by:
University of Glasgow (an NCRM Centre Partner)
Presenter:
Andy Baxter, Kathryn Skivington, Lynsay Matthews, Laurence Moore, Sharon Simpson, Peter Craig, Kathleen Boyd and Neil Craig
Level:
Intermediate (some prior knowledge)
Contact:
Penny White
NCRM Centre Manager
p.c.white@southampton.ac.uk
Map:
View in Google Maps (G12 0TB)
Venue:
Updated venue:
Glasgow Grosvenor Hotel
1-9 Grosvenor Terrace
Glasgow
Description:
This in-person course will provide participants with an understanding of the complex intervention research process. Presentations and activities will relate to the main concepts of developing/identifying and evaluating complex interventions and support participants to apply the principles to their own research. It will focus on the overarching considerations required to develop complex intervention research projects, rather than the details of study design, and enable researchers to develop and conduct research that will provide the most useful evidence for decision making.
The course will be structured around the MRC/NIHR Framework for Developing and Evaluating Complex Interventions. There will be a mix of lectures and small group activities to put learning into practice.
It is for anyone interested in developing, evaluating and implementing interventions with the intention of positive health and/or social change. This could be academic or other researchers, practitioners, or others interested in implementing the best process for their intervention development or evaluation. Participants should have some familiarity with the framework for developing and evaluating interventions, and some experience of working with complex interventions.
The course covers:
Introduction to using the Framework
Developing and identifying interventions
Feasibility research
Evaluation research
Implementation & round up
Course timetable:
The course runs across three days (10am - 4pm) on 5th, 6th & 7th November 2024 and equates to 18 hours of study. Lunch will be provided.
By the end of day 1 participants will:
- Have an overview of the journey through complex intervention research.
- Have an awareness of the challenges and limitations of complex intervention research.
- Understand how to approach complex intervention research & the key overarching considerations.
- Begin to see how you can apply the framework to your own complex intervention research.
- Understand what resources/steps to use in developing a complex intervention
- Know how to take forward an ‘identified’ intervention
- Know how to develop a programme theory and make use of it throughout the research process
- Be aware of key issues to consider for the implementation of complex interventions
By the end of day 2, participants will:
- Understand what feasibility studies are and why they are important
- Have learned how to approach designing a feasibility study
- Have learned how the core elements can be applied at this stage
- Understand how feasibility study findings can inform decision about next steps
- Be able to consider what complexity means for the evaluation of interventions
- Understand that a focus on usefulness of evidence requires methodological pluralism
- Have some understanding of how to choose between evaluation approaches
- Have an understanding of the six key considerations (core elements of the framework) at the evaluation stage
- Have an understanding of what economic evaluation is and why we do it
- Have an understanding of key methods/different types of economic evaluation
By the end of day 3, participants will:
- Be aware of framework checklist and how it can be applied
- Understand the importance of considering Implementation throughout the phases of the framework and specifically at the Implementation Phase
- Review and reinforce the key motivations and innovations of the new framework
- Be aware of research questions and methods particularly relevant to a systems perspective
- Have the opportunity to raise questions to reinforce learning and fill gaps.
Pre-requisites:
Participants should be familiar with the process of intervention development and evaluation, with some experience in intervention research.
No software or sign up required.
Essential reading:
Skivington, Matthews, Simpson et al (2021). A new framework for developing and evaluating complex interventions: update of Medical Research Council guidance BMJ 2021; 374 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.n2061 (Published 30 September 2021).
Cost:
The fee per teaching day is £35 per day for students / £75 per day for staff working for academic institutions, Research Councils and other recognised research institutions, registered charity organisations and the public sector / £250 per day for all other participants. In the event of cancellation by the delegate a full refund of the course fee is available up to two weeks prior to the course. NO refunds are available after this date. If it is no longer possible to run a course due to circumstances beyond its control, NCRM reserves the right to cancel the course at its sole discretion at any time prior to the event. In this event every effort will be made to reschedule the course. If this is not possible or the new date is inconvenient a full refund of the course fee will be given. NCRM shall not be liable for any costs, losses or expenses that may be incurred as a result of its cancellation of a course, including but not limited to any travel or accommodation costs. The University of Southampton’s Online Store T&Cs also continue to apply.
Region:
Scotland
Keywords:
Frameworks for Research and Research Designs, Evaluation Research, Intervention studies, Research Management and Impact, Feasibility research, Complex intervention research
Related publications and presentations from our eprints archive:
Frameworks for Research and Research Designs
Evaluation Research
Intervention studies
Research Management and Impact