Evidence-based policy sits at the intersection of rigorous research and real-world healthcare decision-making. This module examines how systematically appraised evidence is used, contested, and sometimes ignored in policy processes, and why evidence-based approaches can succeed or fail. Through policy-relevant case studies, students explore how evidence is selected and interpreted in complex contexts. The module builds critical skills for navigating uncertainty, disagreement, and value judgements, enabling more effective engagement with healthcare policy debates.
The course will combine face-to-face teaching in Oxford and online distance learning. During the teaching week, we will use a combination of short lectures, interactive seminars, group work and in-class activities. There will also be preparatory reading and online interaction before and after the course, with follow-up on extended essay preparation.
By the end of the course students will be able to:
- outline the typical healthcare policy process and explain how evidence feeds into policy.
- identify and engage critically with EBHC as a tool for policy decision making.
- defend and critique EBHC as a theory of evidence for policy making decisions.
- approach questions about evidence and healthcare policy in a nuanced and critical manner.
- consider the present and future of evidence-based policy within the context of its history and where it came from.
- think critically about what evidence is and how it should be applied to healthcare policy topics.
The last date for receipt of complete applications is 5pm, Thursday 10th June 2027. Regrettably, late applications cannot be accepted.