Giving a Voice to Marginalised Groups for Health Care Decision Making
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De Abreu Louren�o, Richard
Devlin, Nancy
Howard, Kirsten
Ong, Jason J.
Ratcliffe, Julie
Watson, Jo
Willing , Esther
Huynh, Elisabeth
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Adis International Ltd.
Abstract
Internationally, there is broader inclusion of the consumer voice in decisions about healthcare resource allocation; initiatives like the Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR) in Canada and INVOLVE in the UK focus on
expanded consumer representation in forming and enacting health policy [1, 2]. In part, the success of these initiatives will depend on inclusive representation. Representation refects both who is given a voice and whose preferences are captured in health care decision making and policy setting [3–5]. For marginalised groups (those who are socially excluded, find it difficult to be heard or who researchers struggle to reach), achieving representation is a challenge. Challenges arise in asking the right people the right questions and doing so in a manner that reflects and captures their values.
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The Patient
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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