| Literature DB >> 23414561 |
Amanda Kenny1, Nerida Hyett, John Sawtell, Virginia Dickson-Swift, Jane Farmer, Peter O'Meara.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Major health inequities between urban and rural populations have resulted in rural health as a reform priority across a number of countries. However, while there is some commonality between rural areas, there is increasing recognition that a one size fits all approach to rural health is ineffective as it fails to align healthcare with local population need. Community participation is proposed as a strategy to engage communities in developing locally responsive healthcare. Current policy in several countries reflects a desire for meaningful, high level community participation, similar to Arnstein's definition of citizen power. There is a significant gap in understanding how higher level community participation is best enacted in the rural context. The aim of our study was to identify examples, in the international literature, of higher level community participation in rural healthcare.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23414561 PMCID: PMC3583801 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-64
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1Levels of participation. Adapted from Arnstein [29].
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Time period | January 1990 and February 2012 | Any study outside these dates |
| Language | English | Non-English |
| Type of article | Original research article published in a peer reviewed journal | Any article that was not original research and/or unpublished |
| Study focus | Community participation | No reference to community participation, i.e. individual consultation between health professional and client |
| Health service | Rural | No reference to rural health care services |
| Geographical place of study | International, developed countries | Developing countries |
| Population and sample | Mixed population sociodemographic | Reference to only a single sociodemographic factor i.e. gender, cultural group |
Search terms
| (“rural” OR “regional”) AND (“population” OR “healthcare” OR “community”) | |
| (“communit*” OR “consumer” OR “citizen”) AND (“participation” OR “engage*” OR | |
| | “involve*” OR “partner*” OR “collaborat*” OR “develop*”) |
| | OR “cooperative behavio*” OR “stakeholder governance” OR “community network*” OR “community develop*” OR “social capital health services” OR “community-institutional relations” OR “community health planning” OR “health service*” OR “health planning” |
| “qualitative” OR “quantitative” OR “mixed method*” OR “community participation action” OR “case study” OR “cohort study” OR “quality assurance” |
1 [S AND P of I] AND [(DER)].
Figure 2Process of article selection.
Articles with high-level community participation located in rural and regional health settings
| 1 | Broussard [ | 2003 | USA | Development of community health networks | Case study with mixed methods survey; Two rural communities located in Louisiana, St Marys parish population 53 500, Vermillion parish population 50 755 |
| 2 | Coady [ | 2009 | Canada | Volunteers on community health boards | Qualitative study with focus groups; sample 45 volunteers, working on community health boards, population rural shire of 50 000 |
| 3 | Johns [ | 2007 | Australia | Health service redevelopment | Case study with individual and group interviews1; Two Tasmanian rural communities, greater Oatlands population 6101, Deloraine population 5524 |
| 4 | Kegler [ | 2008 | USA | Citizen involvement in paid/unpaid rural health leadership positions | Case study with mixed methods including postal survey, telephone interviews, and focus groups. California, sample N=243, 58% of respondents were from rural sites (n=140). Rural region/municipality combined area population 43 298 |
| 5 | O'Meara [ | 2007 | Australia | Council-led community capacity building | Qualitative design with content analysis of project documents and focus groups with community members; Gippsland, Victoria N= 9829; Korumburra 4465, Trafalgar 2685, postcode 3925 n= 2679 including Newhaven 428, San Remo 1017, Cape Woolamai 12342 |
| 6 | Huttlinger [ | 2004 | USA | Primary healthcare community events | Case study with mixed methods survey; Rural Appalachia, Virginia area population N=17543. Population N=3310 total health event participants, sample n=752 completed surveys, population including Wise, Virginia (3286) and Mountain City, Tennessee (2531) 3 |
1Number of interview participants not reported. 2Population numbers not reported in article, sourced from 2006 Australian census data. 3Population not reported in article, sourced from 2010 U.S census data.