Towards equitable commissioning for our multiethnic society: a mixed-methods qualitative investigation of evidence utilisation by strategic commissioners and public health managers
Background: The health-care commissioning cycle is an increasingly powerful determinant of the health services on offer and the care that patients receive. This study focuses on the mobilisation and use of evidence relating to ethnic...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
NIHR Journals Library
2013-12-01
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Series: | Health Services and Delivery Research |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.3310/hsdr01140 |
Summary: | Background: The health-care commissioning cycle is an increasingly powerful determinant
of the health services on offer and the care that patients receive. This
study focuses on the mobilisation and use of evidence relating to ethnic
diversity and inequality. Objective: To describe the patterns and determinants of evidence use relating to ethnic
diversity and inequality by managers within commissioning work and to
identify promising routes for improvement. Methods: In-depth semistructured interviews with 19 national key informants and
documentation of good practice across England. Detailed case studies of
three primary care trusts involving 70+ interviews with key strategic and
operational actors, extensive observational work and detailed analysis of
related documentation. A suite of commissioning resources based on findings
across all elements were tested and refined through three national workshops
of key stakeholders. Results: Commissioners often lack clarity on how to access, appraise, weight or
synthesise diverse sources of evidence and can limit the transformational
shaping of services by a narrow conceptualisation of their role. Attention
to evidence on ethnic diversity and inequality is frequently omitted at both
national and local levels. Understanding of its importance is problematic
and there are gaps in this evidence that create further barriers to its use
within the commissioning cycle. Commissioning models provide no reward or
sanction for inclusion or omission of evidence on ethnicity and
commissioning teams or partners are not representative of minority ethnic
populations. Neglect of this dimension within national drivers results in
low demand for evidence. This organisational context can promote risk-averse
attitudes that maintain the status quo. Pockets of good practice exist but
they are largely dependent on individual expertise and commitment and are
often not shared. Study findings suggested the need for action at three
levels: creating an enabling environment; equipping health-care
commissioners; and empowering wider stakeholders. Key enabling factors would
be attention to ethnicity within policy drivers; senior-level commitment and
resource; a diverse workforce; collaborative partnerships with relevant
stakeholders; and the creation of local, regional and national
infrastructure. Limitations: It was harder to identify enablers of effective use of evidence in this area
than barriers. Including a case study of an organisation that had achieved
greater mainstreaming of the ethnic diversity agenda might have added to our
understanding of enabling factors. The study was conducted during a period
of fundamental restructuring of NHS commissioning structures. This caused
some difficulties in gathering data and it is possible that widespread
change and uncertainty may have produced more negative narratives from
participants than would otherwise have been the case. Conclusions: Knowledge mobilisation and utilisation within the commissioning cycle occurs
in the context of dynamic interactions between individual agency,
organisational context and the wider health-care setting, situated within
the UK sociopolitical milieu. Our findings highlight isolated pockets of
good practice amidst a general picture of limited organisational engagement,
low priority and inadequate skills. Findings indicate the need for specific
guidance alongside incentives and resources to support commissioning for a
multiethnic population. A more comprehensive infrastructure and, most
importantly, greater political will is needed to promote practice that
focuses on reducing ethnic health inequalities at all stages of the
commissioning cycle. Funding: The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery
Research programme. |
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ISSN: | 2050-4349 2050-4357 |