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http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24950
Title: | PUBLIC AND VULNERABLE POPULATIONS’ PARTICIPATION IN HEALTH-SYSTEM PRIORITY SETTING |
Authors: | Razavi, Shaghayegh Donya |
Advisor: | Kapiriri, Lydia Abelson, Julia Wilson, Michael |
Department: | Health Policy |
Keywords: | priority setting;public participation;vulnerable populations;health system |
Publication Date: | 2019 |
Abstract: | There is a growing body of literature about public participation in health-system priority setting in different contexts and levels of governance, however, explicit focus on vulnerable populations’ participation is lacking. This dissertation incorporated a mix of methodological approaches to address this gap. First, a scoping review was used to synthesize the literature on priority-setting frameworks to understand whether and how applications of the frameworks involve the public and vulnerable populations in different contexts. Second, an interpretive description study was used to examine stakeholder participation at the district level in a low-income country, Uganda. Third, a qualitative description study design was used to qualitatively assess vulnerable women’s participation in health-system priority setting within a district in Uganda, from the perspectives of both vulnerable women and decision-makers. The research chapters complement and build on one another to make substantive, methodological, and theoretical contributions. Specifically, insights gained from the scoping review demonstrate that while priority-setting frameworks may require participation of all stakeholders, in practice certain stakeholder groups, namely the public and especially vulnerable populations, are not consistently integrated into priority-setting processes. The empirical research provides a rich understanding of the roles of different stakeholders in the priority-setting process and provides explanations about why vulnerable women, as a subset of the public, are not participating. This adds to the evidence base that policy-makers can access to guide future attempts to engage publics in health-system priority setting. These studies collectively contribute to a wider understanding of public’s and vulnerable populations’ participation in health-system priority setting in low-income contexts where health disparities are pronounced, and health resources are especially scarce. Policy-makers should aim to support vulnerable populations’ participation in health-system priority setting. Clear articulation of which vulnerable populations should participate and how they should participate can facilitate priority-setting processes. Co-developing participatory methods, frameworks, and guides with vulnerable populations can reinforce their participation and lead to mechanisms of participation that are more responsive to their needs. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24950 |
Appears in Collections: | Open Access Dissertations and Theses |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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razavi_shaghayegh_d_201909_phd.pdf | 1.25 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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