Department of International Public Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, UK.
LVCT Health, Nairobi, Kenya.
Int J Equity Health. 2019 Jan 30;18(1):24. doi: 10.1186/s12939-019-0917-2.
Power imbalances are a key driver of avoidable, unfair and unjust differences in health. Devolution shifts the balance of power in health systems. Intersectionality approaches can provide a 'lens' for analysing how power relations contribute to complex and multiple forms of health advantage and disadvantage. These approaches have not to date been widely used to analyse health systems reforms. While the stated objectives of devolution often include improved equity, efficiency and community participation, past evidence demonstrates that that there is a need to create space and capacity for people to transform existing power relations these within specific contexts.
We carried out a qualitative study between March 2015 and April 2016, involving 269 key informant and in-depth interviews from across the health system in ten counties, 14 focus group discussions with community members in two of these counties and photovoice participatory research with nine young people. We adopted an intersectionality lens to reveal how power relations intersect to produce vulnerabilities for specific groups in specific contexts, and to identify examples of the tacit knowledge about these vulnerabilities held by priority-setting stakeholders, in the wake of the introduction of devolution reforms in Kenya.
Our study identified a range of ways in which longstanding social forces and discriminations limit the power and agency individuals can exercise, but are mediated by their unique circumstances at a given point in their life. These are the social determinants of health, influencing an individual's exposure to risk of ill health from their living environment, their work, or their social context, including social norms relating to their gender, age, geographical residence or socio-economic status. While a range of policy measures have been introduced to encourage participation by typically 'unheard voices', devolution processes have yet to adequately challenge the social norms, and intersecting power relations which contribute to discrimination and marginalisation.
If key actors in devolved decision-making structures are to ensure progress towards universal health coverage, there is need for intersectoral policy action to address social determinants, promote equity and identify ways to challenge and shift power imbalances in priority-setting processes.
权力失衡是导致卫生方面可避免的、不公平和不公正差异的关键因素。权力下放改变了卫生系统中的权力平衡。交叉性方法可以提供一个“视角”,分析权力关系如何导致复杂和多种形式的健康优势和劣势。迄今为止,这些方法尚未广泛用于分析卫生系统改革。虽然权力下放的既定目标通常包括提高公平性、效率和社区参与度,但过去的证据表明,需要在特定背景下为人们创造空间和能力,以改变现有权力关系。
我们在 2015 年 3 月至 2016 年 4 月期间进行了一项定性研究,涉及来自肯尼亚 10 个县卫生系统的 269 名关键信息提供者和深入访谈,在其中 2 个县进行了 14 次社区成员焦点小组讨论,并与 9 名年轻人进行了参与式摄影研究。我们采用交叉性视角揭示了权力关系如何在特定背景下相互交织,为特定群体带来脆弱性,并确定了在肯尼亚权力下放改革引入后,优先事项制定者对这些脆弱性的隐性知识的例子。
我们的研究确定了一系列方式,这些方式长期以来的社会力量和歧视限制了个人在特定时刻能够行使的权力和能动性,但这些方式受到他们在特定时刻的生活环境的影响。这些是健康的社会决定因素,影响个人因生活环境、工作或社会环境而面临的健康不良风险,包括与他们的性别、年龄、地理位置或社会经济地位相关的社会规范。虽然已经出台了一系列政策措施来鼓励通常“被忽视的声音”的参与,但权力下放进程尚未充分挑战导致歧视和边缘化的社会规范和交叉权力关系。
如果权力下放决策结构中的主要行为者要确保朝着全民健康覆盖取得进展,就需要采取跨部门政策行动来解决社会决定因素,促进公平,并确定在优先事项制定过程中挑战和改变权力失衡的方法。