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1 An equity lens for priority-setting approaches in systematic reviews Mona Nasser Erin Ueffing Vivian Welch Peter Tugwell.

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Presentation on theme: "1 An equity lens for priority-setting approaches in systematic reviews Mona Nasser Erin Ueffing Vivian Welch Peter Tugwell."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 An equity lens for priority-setting approaches in systematic reviews Mona Nasser Erin Ueffing Vivian Welch Peter Tugwell

2 2 Difference in Health Outcomes Potentially avoidable Unacceptable and unfair Unavoidable Acceptable What is health inequity?

3 3 “Equity in health matters. It matters in life-and-death ways.” – Margaret Chan, Director-General of WHO “Achieving health equity within a generation is achievable, it is the right thing to do, and now is the right time to do it.” – WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health Why equity?

4 4 Why an equity lens? To guide the process of prioritisation of systematic reviews of health care interventions To increase the proportion of prioritised research questions which can reduce the health equity gap To evaluate interventions that can be potentially effective in disadvantaged groups (e.g. for socioeconomically deprived neighbourhoods)

5 5 Who might be considered disadvantaged? Brown & Evans: PROGRESS Place of residence. Race/ethnicity/culture/language. Occupation. Gender/sex. Religion. Education. SES. Social Capital PROGRESS +

6 6 Who might be considered disadvantaged? PROGRESS + 1. Personal characteristics that attract discrimination (e.g. age, disability); 2. Features of relationships (e.g. smoking parents, excluded from school); 3. Time-dependant relationships (e.g. leaving the hospital, respite care, other instances where a person may be temporarily at a disadvantage). Plus (Oliver et al. 2012)

7 7 Equity lens for priority setting: Process 1) Disadvantaged stakeholders involved? 2) Explicitly consider reducing inequity? 3) Understandable and transparent and inclusive? 4) Consider differences in prevalence, severity and urgency of health problems and impact or value? 5) Consider severity and urgency in disadvantaged populations? 6) Consider potential differences in the impact in disadvantaged? 7) Consider differences in valuing the impact or severity of the disease of disadvantaged ? 8) Consider different values and preferences? 9) Opportunity for stakeholders to feedback and appeal the results?

8 8 Equity lens for priority setting: Outcomes 10) Produced more relevant topics for disadvantaged? 11) Increase likelihood of awareness of priorities? 12) Increase funding of topics relevant to disadvantaged groups? 13) Increase engagement of researchers who work with disadvantaged groups? 14) Increase engagement of disadvantaged groups or decision makers or practitioners who work with disadvantaged groups ? 15) Improve use of prioritized topics by policy makers and decisions makers who work with disadvantaged groups use ? 16) Change policies, legislation or clinical practice in favour of disadvantaged groups? 17) Increase feedback from disadvantaged groups or decision makers, researchers and practitioners who work with disadvantaged groups?

9 9 Evidence for Equity (E4E) A special collection of summaries of systematic reviews for policymakers to highlight interventions that work or don’t work. 5 topic areas: HIV/AIDS Malaria Mental Health (depression) Nutrition (micronutrients) Public Health (obesity) Format: 1-1-3-25 One line One page – of key messages 3 pages – including a SOF table and relevance of the findings for disadvantaged populations 25 pages – link to the full Cochrane review

10 10 Equity lens and E4E: Process 1) Disadvantaged stakeholders involved? 2) Explicitly consider reducing inequity? 3) Understandable and transparent and inclusive? 4) Consider differences in prevalence, severity and urgency of health problems and impact or value? 5) Consider severity and urgency in disadvantaged populations? 6) Consider potential differences in the impact in disadvantaged? 7) Consider differences in valuing the impact or severity of the disease of disadvantaged ? 8) Consider different values and preferences? 9) Opportunity for stakeholders to feedback and appeal the results?

11 11 Equity lens and E4E: Outcomes 10) Produced more relevant topics for disadvantaged? 11) Increase likelihood of awareness of priorities? 12) Increase funding of topics relevant to disadvantaged groups? 13) Increase engagement of researchers who work with disadvantaged groups? 14) Increase engagement of disadvantaged groups or decision makers or practitioners who work with disadvantaged groups ? 15) Improve use of prioritized topics by policy makers and decisions makers who work with disadvantaged groups use ? 16) Change policies, legislation or clinical practice in favour of disadvantaged groups? 17) Increase feedback from disadvantaged groups or decision makers, researchers and practitioners who work with disadvantaged groups?

12 12 Summary and Key Messages When setting priorities, it is important to consider how those priorities will address issues for the disadvantaged The equity lens highlights methods for considering equity in priority setting

13 13 Questions? Vivian.welch@uottawa.ca


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