Johns Hopkins International Injury Research Unit, Health Systems Program, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street Suite E8527, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins University Blomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Int J Equity Health. 2023 May 17;22(1):91. doi: 10.1186/s12939-023-01896-5.
There is a large and growing unmet need for rehabilitation - a diverse category of services that aim to improve functioning across the life course - particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Yet despite urgent calls to increase political commitment, many low- and middle-income country governments have dedicated little attention to expanding rehabilitation services. Existing policy scholarship explains how and why health issues reach the policy agenda and offers applicable evidence to advance access to physical, medical, psychosocial, and other types of rehabilitation services. Drawing from this scholarship and empirical data on rehabilitation, this paper proposes a policy framework to understand national-level prioritization of rehabilitation in low- and middle-income countries.
We conducted key informant interviews with rehabilitation stakeholders in 47 countries, complemented by a purposeful review of peer-reviewed and gray literature to achieve thematic saturation. We analyzed the data abductively using a thematic synthesis methodology. Rehabilitation-specific findings were triangulated with policy theory and empirical case studies on the prioritization of other health issues to develop the framework.
The novel policy framework includes three components which shape the prioritization of rehabilitation on low- and middle-income countries' national government's health agendas. First, rehabilitation lacks a consistent problem definition, undermining the development of consensus-driven solutions which could advance the issue on policy agendas. Second, governance arrangements are fragmented within and across government ministries, between the government and its citizens, and across national and transnational actors engaged in rehabilitation service provision. Third, national legacies - particularly from civil conflict - and weaknesses in the existing health system influences both rehabilitation needs and implementation feasibility.
This framework can support stakeholders in identifying the key components impeding prioritization for rehabilitation across different national contexts. This is a crucial step for ultimately better advancing the issue on national policy agendas and improving equity in access to rehabilitation services.
康复需求巨大且不断增长——康复是一个涵盖广泛的服务类别,旨在改善整个生命周期的功能——尤其是在中低收入国家。然而,尽管人们强烈呼吁增加政治承诺,但许多中低收入国家政府几乎没有关注扩大康复服务。现有的政策研究解释了卫生问题是如何以及为何进入政策议程的,并提供了适用的证据来促进获得身体、医疗、心理社会和其他类型的康复服务。本文借鉴了这一学术研究以及康复方面的实证数据,提出了一个政策框架,以了解中低收入国家对康复的国家层面重视程度。
我们对 47 个国家的康复利益相关者进行了重点访谈,并对同行评议和灰色文献进行了有针对性的审查,以达到主题饱和。我们使用主题综合方法对数据进行了非系统分析。康复的具体发现与政策理论和其他卫生问题优先排序的实证案例研究进行了三角剖分,以制定该框架。
该新的政策框架包括三个构成部分,这些构成部分塑造了中低收入国家政府卫生议程对康复的重视程度。首先,康复缺乏一致的问题定义,破坏了共识驱动解决方案的发展,而这些解决方案可以推动该问题在政策议程上取得进展。其次,政府各部门内部和之间、政府与其公民之间以及参与康复服务提供的国家和跨国行为体之间的治理安排都很分散。第三,国家传统——特别是来自内战的传统——以及现有卫生系统的薄弱环节,既影响康复需求,也影响实施的可行性。
该框架可以支持利益相关者确定在不同国家背景下阻碍康复工作优先排序的关键因素。这是最终在国家政策议程上更好地推进该问题并改善康复服务获取公平性的关键步骤。