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Capacity building is a strategy and capacity gain is an outcome

Evaluation Evaluating Capacity Gains. Capacity building is a strategy and capacity gain is an outcome Capacity building as a strategy needs to be evaluated so that judgements can be made about their effectiveness

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Capacity building is a strategy and capacity gain is an outcome

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  1. Evaluation Evaluating Capacity Gains • Capacity building is a strategy and capacity gain is an outcome • Capacity building as a strategy needs to be evaluated so that judgements can be made about their effectiveness • Evaluating capacity has been a much neglected aspect of PHN practice but there is an increasing body of intelligence and useful evaluating tools Evaluating Capacity Gains

  2. Evaluating Capacity Gains

  3. Challenges in Measuring Capacity • The key issues and challenges in measuring capacity include: • Multiple understandings of terms - shared terminology cannot be assumed when working at multiple levels or across sectors → data collection and analysis issues • Evolving understanding of capacity – the definition and nature of capacity is evolving → measurement tools can be lengthy and complex • Invisibility of capacity building - Community empowerment is explicit in health promotion creating a culture of invisibility around capacity building → difficulty in recognising, describing and measuring capacity building • Dynamic contexts - contextual aspects can influence the measurement of capacity: staff turnover, health system renewal, conflicting perspectives, conflicting personalities etc Evaluating Capacity Gains

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