| Literature DB >> 30200985 |
Hudson Pacifico Silva1, Pascale Lehoux2,3, Fiona Alice Miller4, Jean-Louis Denis5,6.
Abstract
The scholarship on responsible research and innovation (RRI) aims to align the processes and outcomes of innovation with societal values by involving a broad range of stakeholders from a very early stage. Though this scholarship offers a new lens to consider the challenges new health technologies raise for health systems around the world, there is a need to define the dimensions that specifically characterise responsible innovation in health (RIH). The present article aims to introduce an integrative RIH framework drawing on the RRI literature, the international literature on health systems as well as specific bodies of knowledge that shed light on key dimensions of health innovations. Combining inductive and deductive theory-building strategies and concomitant with the development of a formal tool to assess the responsibility of innovations, we developed a framework that is comprised of nine dimensions organised within five value domains, namely population health, health system, economic, organisational and environmental. RIH provides health and innovation policy-makers with a common framework that supports the development of innovations that can tackle significant system-level challenges, including sustainability and equity.Entities:
Keywords: Health equity; Health systems; Health technology; Responsible research and innovation; Sustainability
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30200985 PMCID: PMC6131953 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-018-0362-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
A summary of responsible research and innovation (RRI) according to the literature
| What RRI is | - A process [ |
| Who should be involved | - Societal actors and innovators [ |
| When | - Early stage of R&I processes [ |
| To do what | - Anticipate risks and benefits, reflect on prevailing conceptions, values and beliefs, engage stakeholders and members of the wider public, and respond to stakeholders, public values and changing circumstances [ |
| In what ways | - Working together [ |
| To what ends | - Allow a proper embedding of scientific and technological advances in society [ |
The value domains and dimensions of responsible innovation in health
| Value domain | Dimension |
|---|---|
| Population health | Health relevance: Does the innovation address a relevant health problem? |
| Health system | Inclusiveness: Were the innovation development processes inclusive? |
| Economic | Frugality: Does the innovation deliver greater value to more people using fewer resources? |
| Organisational | Business model: Does the organisation that produces the innovation seek to provide more value to users, purchasers and society? |
| Environmental | Eco-responsibility: Does the innovation limit its negative environmental impacts throughout its lifecycle as much possible? |
Fig. 1Responsible innovation in health framework