posted on 2013-05-11, 10:52authored byRachel Margaret McEvoy, Anne E. MacFarlane
There are now several decades of history of community participation in health, with
significant international evidence to suggest that there is much to be gained by primary
health services and disadvantaged communities working in partnership.
In this paper we provide an overview of community participation in primary care,
establishing the policy context in which a recent ‘Joint Initiative on Community
Participation in Primary Health Care’ was developed in Ireland. This Initiative was
designed to support the involvement of disadvantaged communities and groups in the
development of primary health care services at local level.
An independent formative evaluation of the Joint Initiative took place between
September 2009 and April 2010. We present a summary of key findings from this
evaluation. We pay particular attention to the issue of sustaining community participation
in newly developed Primary Care Teams (PCTs) in the current and changing
economic climate, an issue considered crucial if the documented positive impacts of
the Joint Initiative are to be maintained and the potential for health gains in the longer
term are to be realised.
We then argue that the Joint Initiative referred to in this paper clearly provides a
strong prototype for community participation in PCTs in Ireland. We also ask whether
it can be replicated across all PCTs in the country and embedded as a core part of
thinking and everyday health care. We highlight the need for research to build
knowledge about the ways in which innovations such as this can be embedded into
ongoing, routine healthcare practice. This research agenda will have relevance for
policy makers, practitioners and evaluators in Ireland and other healthcare jurisdictions.
Funding
Organisation, expression and diversity of the sub-telomeric regions of the ancient eukaryote, Giardia duodenalis
Primary Care Research and Development;14, pp. 126-139
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Note
peer-reviewed
Other Funding information
HSE
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