Development action with informed and engaged societies
As of March 15 2025, The Communication Initiative (The CI) platform is operating at a reduced level, with no new content being posted to the global website and registration/login functions disabled. (La Iniciativa de Comunicación, or CILA, will keep running.) While many interactive functions are no longer available, The CI platform remains open for public use, with all content accessible and searchable until the end of 2025. 

Please note that some links within our knowledge summaries may be broken due to changes in external websites. The denial of access to the USAID website has, for instance, left many links broken. We can only hope that these valuable resources will be made available again soon. In the meantime, our summaries may help you by gleaning key insights from those resources. 

A heartfelt thank you to our network for your support and the invaluable work you do.
Time to read
less than
1 minute
Read so far

Strategies for Evaluating Human-centered Design: Methods, Cross-disciplinary Collaboration and Data Use

0 comments

Abstract for a Skills-Building Workshop from the 2022 International SBCC Summit in Morocco: 

"Human-centered design (HCD) has increasingly been recognized as a valuable tool to tackle the complex challenges that the global health community faces and to address community needs by facilitating faster innovation, better collaboration, more effective scale, and elevating the voice and agency of vulnerable groups. Yet, traditional evaluation approaches are often not well suited to capture the value of HCD when applied in public health programming or to assess the outcomes of programs that are continuously adapting and improving. As a result, these traditional evaluation approaches need to be re-conceptualized. There is a growing body of evidence and practice from HCD programs with evaluation components that can be shared to support the crafting of new,innovative approaches to evaluation moving forward and for assessing the influence of HCD on behavior change.  Additionally, it is important for stakeholders from across the public health community of practice - implementers, funders, evaluators, and designers - to align on realistic expectations for the evaluation of HCD approaches. This workshop will offer participants up-to-date learning and new skills related to framing a monitoring, evaluation and learning (MEL) strategy for interventions that apply HCD. It will address the importance of understanding the anticipated influence and value of HCD in health programming, the need to balance expectations when applying measurement approaches (impact v learning and adaptation);and the critical nature of partnering and cross-disciplinary team communication practices to optimize the application of HCD and its link to program outcomes."

Source

Approved abstract for the 2022 SBCC Summit in Marrakech, Morocco. From SBCC Summit documentation. Image credit: PSI/BSchilling