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AMEE Guides

Health advocacy*

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Pages 128-135 | Published online: 21 Nov 2016
 

Abstract

In the medical profession, activities related to ensuring access to care, navigating the system, mobilizing resources, addressing health inequities, influencing health policy and creating system change are known as health advocacy. Foundational concepts in health advocacy include social determinants of health and health inequities. The social determinants of health (i.e. the conditions in which people live and work) account for a significant proportion of an individual’s and a population’s health outcomes. Health inequities are disparities in health between populations, perpetuated by economic, social, and political forces. Although it is clear that efforts to improve the health of an individual or population must consider “upstream” factors, how this is operationalized in medicine and medical education is controversial. There is a lack of clarity around how health advocacy is delineated, how physicians’ scope of responsibility is defined and how teaching and assessment is conceptualized and enacted. Numerous curricular interventions have been described in the literature; however, regardless of the success of isolated interventions, understanding health advocacy instruction, assessment and evaluation will require a broader examination of processes, practices and values throughout medicine and medical education. To support the instruction, assessment and evaluation of health advocacy, a novel framework for health advocacy is introduced. This framework was developed for several purposes: defining and delineating different types and approaches to advocacy, generating a “roadmap” of possible advocacy activities, establishing shared language and meaning to support communication and collaboration across disciplines and providing a tool for the assessment of learners and for the evaluation of teaching and programs. Current approaches to teaching and assessment of health advocacy are outlined, as well as suggestions for future directions and considerations.

Acknowledgements

We would like to acknowledge Diana Dawes for research assistance during framework development, Jessica Ly for the development of figures and webpage for communication, Lindsay Gowland for the development of infographic (figures) and Angela Towle for permission to use her data for framework development.

Disclosure statement

All authors report no disclosures.

Funding

This work was supported by The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada [13/AMS-02].

Notes on contributors

Dr Maria Hubinette, MD, CCFP, MMEd, is a Family Physician and Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Family Practice at the University of British Columbia.

Sarah Dobson, BA&Sc, MSc, is the Project Director at UBC's Stigma and Resilience Among Vulnerable Youth Center (School of Nursing, University of British Columbia) and a co-founder of the nonprofit Basics for Health Society.

Dr Ian Scott, MD, MSc, CCFP, FRCPC, FCFP, is Associate Professor in the Department of Family Practice and Director of the Center for Health Education Scholarship at the University of British Columbia (UBC).

Dr Jonathan Sherbino, MD, Med, FRCPC, FAcadMEd, is an associate professor in the Department of Medicine, McMaster University.

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