A policy impact case study using real world data from Welsh government fuel poverty schemes to inform scheme design
Sian Morrison-Rees, Sarah Lowe

Abstract
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Global Public Health Policies and Epidemiology · Healthcare Systems and Challenges
Objectives
To reduce fuel poverty in Wales: the Welsh Government developed schemes to provide energy efficiency improvements to lower income households.
To inform scheme design: investigate health impacts by linking scheme data to health records.
Presented objective: to demonstrate how research findings using real world data can impact policy focus.
Method
The research was conducted by an independent researcher at Swansea University who co-produced research questions with the Welsh Government Fuel Poverty Policy Team.
A longitudinal dataset was created linking anonymised ‘Warm Homes: Nest’ improvements data to residents’ routine health records in the SAIL Databank at Swansea University. We examined recipient health before and after intervention compared with controls.
A high-level policy briefing and research report were published in the Welsh Government Social Research – Analysis for Policy series.
Findings were used to design and pilot new eligibility criteria to capture low-income individuals with a respiratory, circulatory or mental health condition.
Results
This presentation will describe the policy impact pathway from initial discussions with policymakers to real world change, including:
securing ESRC funding for a Knowledge Transfer Fellowship, which included a 2013 data linking demonstration project……which allowed funding to be secured for a 2015-18 research project on the impact of improvements on recipient health……which published emerging findings in 2016……and substantive findings in 2017, showing a significant positive impact of improvements on recipient health……which policymakers used to design a pilot to test ways to widen eligibility criteria to include individuals on a low income with a respiratory, circulatory or mental health condition……which led to scheme criteria being widened in 2019.
By 2021, 25% of recipients entered the scheme via the ‘health route’.
Conclusion
By delivering research findings generated using linked real world data, and focused on questions co-produced with policymakers, researchers can successfully impact the design and implementation of government policy, thereby improving the lives of people in the real world - in this case, the health of the citizens of Wales.
