Evaluation of Health Education Programs - Why We Check
- Definition: Systematic assessment of the worth or merit of a health education program.
- Purpose:
- To determine the extent to which program objectives are met.
- To identify strengths and weaknesses for program improvement.
- To assess efficiency and effectiveness.
- Goals:
- Improve program quality and impact.
- Ensure accountability to stakeholders (funders, community).
- Aid in decision-making for future planning and resource allocation.
- Contribute to the knowledge base of health education.
⭐ Evaluation ensures accountability and guides resource allocation for health programs.
Evaluation of Health Education Programs - Timing & Targets
📌 FPIOS: Formative, Process, Impact, Outcome, Summative.
| Evaluation Type | Purpose | Timing | Focus / Key Questions Answered (Examples) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Formative | Improve program design & materials | Before/During development | Feasibility, appropriateness, pilot testing (Is the plan sound?) |
| Process | Monitor implementation, fidelity, reach | During program | Activities conducted, participation, resources used (Is it on track?) |
| Impact | Assess immediate effects (KAB*) | After intervention | Changes in Knowledge, Attitudes, Beliefs, Practices (Any immediate change?) |
| Outcome | Assess long-term health status changes | Long-term post-program | Morbidity, mortality, quality of life (Did it improve health?) |
| Summative | Judge overall effectiveness, value, future use | End of program | Overall success, cost-effectiveness, policy decisions (Was it successful?) |
⭐ Process evaluation focuses on program fidelity and reach, answering 'Is the program being implemented as planned?'.
Evaluation of Health Education Programs - Gauging Success
Evaluation systematically assesses a health education program's effectiveness, impact, and efficiency. It helps determine if objectives were met and guides future improvements.
- Evaluation Methods:
- Quantitative: Numerical data.
- Surveys (e.g., KAP surveys)
- Checklists
- Pre/post tests (measure change)
- Qualitative: In-depth understanding.
- In-depth Interviews (IDIs)
- Focus Group Discussions (FGDs)
- Observation (behaviors)
- Quantitative: Numerical data.
- Key Indicators:
- Process: Program activities, reach.
- Impact (Short-term):
- ↑Knowledge
- Changes in Attitude
- Practice changes (KAP)
- Outcome (Long-term):
- Behavioral changes (e.g., ↑handwashing)
- ↓Morbidity/mortality rates
- ↑Quality of life
⭐ KAP (Knowledge, Attitude, Practice) surveys are widely used to measure the immediate effects (impact) of health education programs.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Evaluation is essential to judge program effectiveness and guide improvements.
- Key types: Formative (planning), Process (activities), Impact (KAP changes), Outcome (health status).
- Impact evaluation focuses on immediate changes in Knowledge, Attitude, and Practices (KAP).
- Outcome evaluation measures long-term effects like reduced morbidity/mortality.
- Process evaluation assesses program coverage, fidelity, and acceptability.
- Evaluation indicators should be SMART: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound.
- Cost-Effectiveness Analysis (CEA) and Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) aid resource decisions.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app