This problem is a UK government area of research interest (ARI) that was originally posted at https://ari.org.uk/ by a UK government organisation to indicate that they are keen to see research related to this area.
What are the best ways to measure the ‘softer’ outcomes, such as changes in wellbeing, and how to attach a value to such interventions?
We are keen to hear about cutting-edge approaches the research community is using which could have applications to our work. Particularly in ground-breaking evaluations, with robust focus on impact and value for money, what works and using more innovative techniques and data sharing
Contact details
The lead contacts are: Lesley Smith, Senior Principal Research Officer, Analysis, Research and Co-ordination Unit, Analysis and Data Directorate: Lesley.Smith@levellingup.gov.uk and David Hughes, Head of the Chief Scientific Adviser’s office: psChiefScientificAdviser@levellingup.gov.uk.
Related UKRI Projects
- Developing a wellbeing measure for public health evaluations: integrating capabilities and happiness
- What Works Centre for Wellbeing - Cross-cutting strand
- Going beyond health related quality of life - towards a broader QALY measure for use across sectors
- Sheffield Hallam University and Westfield Health & Wellbeing Limited
- Valuing the health benefits of city well-being
- Making Wellbeing Count for Policy: Patterns and trends in personal, social and societal wellbeing in Europe and the UK.
- The Many Dimensions of Wellbeing
- Methodology State-of-the-art workshop: management of measurement reactivity in trials of interventions to improve health
- Validating generic preference-base measures of health in mental health populations and estimating mapping functions
- Identifying and critiquing different approaches to developing complex interventions (INDEX study)