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This 7 page paper discusses the evaluation, analysis and revision stages of policy-making processes. The paper includes a framework for program evaluation. The focus is on health policy. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PGplhlear.rtf
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achieving its goals and objectives. This process should be included in the policy itself just as it is included in any strategic plan. Among other things, monitoring offers transparency as
well as accountability. The plan establishes a standard by which comparisons may be made in terms of before and after or against another policy (WHO, 2001). There are multiple issues
related to policy evaluation. One is the difference between evaluating the policy and evaluating the programs that emerge from the policy. Public health policies must be continually analyzed to assess
their effectiveness (Porche. 2004). Some people equate analysis and evaluation but they are really different. Evaluation refers to how well the policy has achieved its goals and objectives; analysis refers
to the context in which the policy exists (Porche. 2004). For example, the new health reform law would be evaluated according to its objectives, which include reducing health care costs
and reducing the number of uninsured Americans (Obama for America, 2008). Analysis may also provide information regarding the degree of congruence between the policy and the existing social and political
context (Porche. 2004). Analysis will also provide insight on whether or not the issue the policy addresses still exists. As commented earlier, policy evaluation focuses on the effectiveness of the
policy. Is it achieving its stated objectives? Evaluations are always systematic and data-driven, i.e., evaluation encompasses and empirical study that will evaluate the policy itself and the programs that emerged
from the policy. Health policies include target populations, target diseases, or some other target. That is what the policy is about, it intends to change something, such as resolving a
problem or addressing a problematic issue, such as uninsured Americans or soaring costs of health care. When evaluating a policy, the team must also look at side-effects. Policies typically
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