Pratt Bridget, Hyder Adnan A
Nossal Institute for Global Health, School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, 161 Barry Street Carlton, VIC, 3053, Australia.
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Nov 15;16(Suppl 7):619. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1868-6.
Health systems research is increasingly being conducted in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Such research should aim to reduce health disparities between and within countries as a matter of global justice. For such research to do so, ethical guidance that is consistent with egalitarian theories of social justice proposes it ought to (amongst other things) focus on worst-off countries and research populations. Yet who constitutes the worst-off is not well-defined.
By applying existing work on disadvantage from political philosophy, the paper demonstrates that (at least) two options exist for how to define the worst-off upon whom equity-oriented health systems research should focus: those who are worst-off in terms of health or those who are systematically disadvantaged. The paper describes in detail how both concepts can be understood and what metrics can be relied upon to identify worst-off countries and research populations at the sub-national level (groups, communities). To demonstrate how each can be used, the paper considers two real-world cases of health systems research and whether their choice of country (Uganda, India) and research population in 2011 would have been classified as amongst the worst-off according to the proposed concepts.
The two proposed concepts can classify different countries and sub-national populations as worst-off. It is recommended that health researchers (or other actors) should use the concept that best reflects their moral commitments-namely, to perform research focused on reducing health inequalities or systematic disadvantage more broadly. If addressing the latter, it is recommended that they rely on the multidimensional poverty approach rather than the income approach to identify worst-off populations.
中低收入国家(LMICs)开展卫生系统研究的情况日益增多。作为全球正义问题,此类研究应旨在减少国家之间和国家内部的健康差距。为使此类研究达到这一目的,与平等主义社会正义理论相一致的伦理指导建议,它应该(除其他事项外)关注处境最不利的国家和研究人群。然而,谁构成处境最不利者并没有明确的定义。
通过应用政治哲学中关于劣势的现有研究成果,本文表明,对于如何界定以公平为导向的卫生系统研究应关注的处境最不利者,(至少)存在两种选择:在健康方面处境最不利者,或那些系统性处于劣势者。本文详细描述了这两个概念如何理解,以及可依据哪些指标来确定国家以下层面(群体、社区)的处境最不利国家和研究人群。为说明每种概念如何使用,本文考虑了两个卫生系统研究的实际案例,以及根据所提出的概念,它们在2011年选择的国家(乌干达、印度)和研究人群是否会被归类为处境最不利者。
所提出的两个概念可将不同国家和国家以下层面的人群归类为处境最不利者。建议卫生研究人员(或其他行为主体)应使用最能反映其道德承诺的概念,即开展更广泛地侧重于减少健康不平等或系统性劣势的研究。如果关注后者,建议他们依靠多维贫困方法而非收入方法来确定处境最不利人群。