Patient engagement in healthcare planning and evaluation: A call for social justice

Patient engagement in healthcare planning and evaluation has been promoted as a way to improve healthcare's ability to meet patients' needs. However, populations experiencing oppression and discrimination, such as racism, colonialism, sexism, heterosexism, cisnormativity, ableism, classism...

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Veröffentlicht in:The International journal of health planning and management 2022-12, Vol.37 (S1), p.20-31
1. Verfasser: Snow, M. Elizabeth
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Patient engagement in healthcare planning and evaluation has been promoted as a way to improve healthcare's ability to meet patients' needs. However, populations experiencing oppression and discrimination, such as racism, colonialism, sexism, heterosexism, cisnormativity, ableism, classism, and poverty, are often underrepresented in patient engagement spaces. The context and structure of patient engagement processes may systematically exclude certain populations from participating in meaningful ways or from participating at all. By excluding certain populations from active, meaningful patient engagement, we risk planning and evaluating health services on the basis of the values, needs, and preferences of the dominant population. This, in turn, will further entrench health inequities and preclude the ability to surface ideas that challenge dominant conceptualisations of health and healthcare, thereby reinforcing the status quo rather than promoting healthcare transformation. Recognising that experiences of health, healthcare, and patient engagement processes are mediated through gender, race, ability, sexual orientation, and other dimensions of diversity, it is proposed that processes for engaging patients in healthcare planning and evaluation must by intersectional, attend to systemic and power relations, and truly put patients in the driver's seat of engagement processes. Health services planners and evaluators need to create more inclusive, accessible, and appropriate patient engagement experiences in order to focus on transforming healthcare towards a more socially just system. Highlights Patient engagement often systematically excludes populations experiencing oppression Silencing and delegitimising these populations further entrenches health inequities Intersectionality helps unpack and disrupt systemic issues and power relations involved Truly accessible and meaningful patient engagement is needed to transform healthcare towards a more socially just system
ISSN:0749-6753
1099-1751
DOI:10.1002/hpm.3509