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Published in: BMC Public Health 4/2017

Open Access 01-11-2017 | Research

All things to all people: trade-offs in pursuit of an ideal modeling tool for maternal and child health

Authors: Timothy Roberton, Kate Litvin, Andrew Self, Angela R. Stegmuller

Published in: BMC Public Health | Special Issue 4/2017

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Abstract

Background

Modeling tools have potential to aid decision making for program planning and evaluation at all levels, but are still largely the domain of technical experts, consultants, and global-level staff. One model that can improve decision making for maternal and child health is the Lives Saved Tool (LiST). We examined respondents’ perceptions of LiST’s strengths and weaknesses, to identify ways in which LiST – and similar modeling tools – can adapt to be more accessible and helpful to policy makers.

Methods

We interviewed 21 purposefully sampled LiST users. First, we identified the characteristics that respondents explicitly stated, or implicitly implied, were important in a modeling tool, and then used these results to create a framework for reviewing a modeling tool. Second, we used this framework to categorize the strengths and weaknesses of LiST that respondents articulated.

Results

Two overarching qualities were important to respondents: usability and accuracy. For some users, LiST already meets these criteria: it allows for customized input parameters to increase specificity; the interface is intuitive; the assumptions and calculations are scientifically sound; and the standard metric of “additional lives saved” is understood and comparable across settings. Other respondents had different views, although their complaints were typically not that the tool is unusable or inaccurate, but that aspects of the tool could be better explained or easier to understand.

Conclusion

Government and agency staff at all levels should be empowered to use the data available to them, including the use of models to make full use of these data. For this, we need tools that meet a threshold of both accuracy, so results clarify rather than mislead, and usability, so tools can be used readily and widely, not just by select experts. With these ideals in mind, there are ways in which LiST might continue to be improved or adapted to further advance its uptake and impact.
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Metadata
Title
All things to all people: trade-offs in pursuit of an ideal modeling tool for maternal and child health
Authors
Timothy Roberton
Kate Litvin
Andrew Self
Angela R. Stegmuller
Publication date
01-11-2017
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Public Health / Issue Special Issue 4/2017
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-017-4751-4

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