E. Fielding, JohnathanA. Briss, PeterABSTRACT: Evidence-based approaches (those explicitly linked to the best available scientific evidence and reflecting community preferences and feasibility) are increasingly used to inform health policy decision making on the burden of a disease attributable to particular causes, interventions and policies that might work to confront those causes, and issues of community fit and feasibility. This paper introduces several tools for evidence-based public health: the health impact assessment, the systematic review, and a portfolio for assuring community fit and feasibility. Discussion of these tools serves as a springboard to consider how to better bring scientific evidence to bear on real-life health issues. [Health Affairs 25, no. 4 (2006): 969–978; 10.1377/hlthaff.25.4.969]PolicyPublic HealthinterventionsPublic Health PolicyEvidence-based approachespolicymakersHealth Impact AssessmentHIAPromoting Evidence-Based Public Health Policy: Can We Have Better Evidence And More Action?Article