Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Winter 2-13-2014
Journal / Book Title
Health Promotion Practice
Abstract
There are important practical and ethical considerations for organizations in conducting their own, or commissioning external, evaluations and for both practitioners and evaluators, when assessing programs built on strongly held ideological or philosophical approaches. Assessing whether programs “work” has strong political, financial, and/or moral implications, particularly when expending public dollars, and may challenge objectivity about a particular program or approach. Using a case study of the evaluation of a school-based abstinence-until-marriage program, this article discusses the challenges, lessons learned, and ethical responsibilities regarding decisions about evaluation, specifically associated with ideologically driven programs. Organizations should consider various stakeholders and views associated with their program to help identify potential pitfalls in evaluation. Once identified, the program or agency needs to carefully consider its answers to two key questions: Do they want the answer and are they willing to modify the program? Having decided to evaluate, the choice of evaluator is critical to assuring that ethical principles are maintained and potential skepticism or criticism of findings can be addressed appropriately. The relationship between program and evaluator, including agreements about ownership and eventual publication and/or promotion of data, should be addressed at the outset. Programs and organizations should consider, at the outset, their ethical responsibility when findings are not expected or desired. Ultimately, agencies, organizations, and programs have an ethical responsibility to use their data to provide health promotion programs, whether ideologically founded or not, that appropriately and effectively address the problems they seek to solve.
DOI
10.1177/1524839913520547
MSU Digital Commons Citation
Lieberman, Lisa D.; Fagan, Michael C.; and Neiger, Brad L., "Evaluating Programs That Address Ideological Issues: Ethical and Practical Considerations for Practitioners and Evaluators" (2014). Department of Public Health Scholarship and Creative Works. 99.
https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/public-health-facpubs/99
Published Citation
Lieberman, Lisa D., Michael C. Fagen, and Brad L. Neiger. "Evaluating programs that address ideological issues: Ethical and practical considerations for practitioners and evaluators." Health promotion practice 15, no. 2 (2014): 161-167.
Included in
Bioethics and Medical Ethics Commons, Clinical Epidemiology Commons, Community Health and Preventive Medicine Commons, Epidemiology Commons, Health and Medical Physics Commons, Health Services Administration Commons, Health Services Research Commons, International Public Health Commons, Life Sciences Commons, Medical Specialties Commons, Other Public Health Commons, Patient Safety Commons, Public Health Education and Promotion Commons, Quality Improvement Commons