At your fingertip: New WHO Guide and online Repository of WHO tools for Evidence-informed Decision-making

At WHO, evidence and science have been at the heart of improving health policy and practice. They are a major steppingstone towards achieving the WHO’s triple billion targets and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

With its new Guide on evidence-informed decision-making and the related online repository of tried and tested WHO tools, WHO is now providing users with comprehensive hands-on guidance so that rigorous systematic and transparent methods are applied for the creation and application of research evidence in our day-to-day work – whether developing policy options, formulating new programmes or providing technical assistance to Member States.

The Guide, launched on 6 April 2022, with over 400 participants from across the world attending the event, brings together WHO’s joint experience and know-how from different departments and workstreams into a central platform. The publication’s sub-title “Evidence. Policy. Impact.” is key to the Organization’s global mission and ambition.

At the core of the Guide and repository is its evidence ecosystem for impact’ framework, serving as a user-friendly matrix outlining the process and steps of evidence-informed decision-making, and capturing WHO’s methods and tools linked to promoting better informed decision-making in countries and globally.

Apart from providing guidance on how to apply rigorous systematic and transparent methods for evidence-informed decision-making, the Guide aims to promote more dialogue and collaboration between communities of the evidence ecosystem of evidence producers and users – whether within the Organization or at country level.

As the WHO Chief Scientist has postulated in the foreword of the Guide: “To achieve even better results in future, we need to further optimize our work across the evidence ecosystem and ensure that decision-makers are equipped to navigate a plethora of partially overlapping evidence and guidance of variable quality. A well-functioning evidence ecosystem with structures, capacity and incentives in place will ensure that evidence is available and accessible to all, and routinely used to inform decision-making.”

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