Abstract

The role of advocacy in Health Impact Assessment (HIA) is debated among practitioners. Concerns revolve around whether engaging in advocacy undermines objectivity and credibility. While there is agreement that dissemination of findings and recommendations is necessary, there is a spectrum of activities that can be undertaken in an HIA, one end of which might be considered advocacy.In this Perspective from the Field, We posit that in conducting an HIA, practitioners are choosing to advocate for a set of causes that may include improved health, decreased inequity, and increased democracy. We come to the table with these values and the intent to advocate for them. For any HIA to be relevant and effective at advancing these causes in decision-making contexts, practitioners must use the best available evidence and a range of strategies to communicate evidence to policy audiences, including deliberate tactics with community organizations, decision makers, and others that can aid in addressing power imbalances. Though we believe that HIA practice cannot reach its full potential without embracing advocacy, practitioners must make decisions given their context, including local power dynamics as to how far into the advocacy spectrum they venture in any given HIA.This paper is geared towards HIA practitioners and others who want to understand the opportunity advocacy provides. We begin by describing the underlying values of HIA that inspire this perspective, including those in the 1999 Gothenburg Consensus Paper on HIA (Quigley et al., 2006). After briefly describing concerns HIA practitioners may have with advocacy, particularly that it undermines the objectivity and credibility of the HIA process, we then discuss common advocacy activities practitioners might undertake, and ways to address risks these activities may pose. These opportunities to undertake advocacy include partnering with diverse stakeholders, developing advisory committees, gauging the power and policy context, and thinking broadly about the best tactics to effectively communicate findings. We conclude with a case study describing how advocacy was used in the Treatment Instead of Prison HIA in Wisconsin to advance health, equity, and democracy.

Highlights

  • This paper is geared towards Health Impact Assessment (HIA) practitioners and others who want to understand the opportunity advocacy provides

  • We conclude with a case study describing how advocacy was used in the Treatment Instead of Prison HIA in Wisconsin to advance health, equity, and democracy

  • While HIP participated in press briefings and media interviews to explain the HIA process and findings, our perspective was that community members would be the most effective spokespeople to communicate to decision makers and advocacy on their own behalf advanced the goal of empowerment

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Summary

Advocacy in HIA

Farhang; Heller, Introduction and, in the face of these forces, data by itself does not lead. The 2014 Minimum Elements and Practice Standards for Health to change. This is evident in a wide range of policy debates, Impact Assessment open by describing the goal of HIA: from gun control to climate change, and from healthy food “Health Impact Assessment (HIA) is a practice that aims access to access to paid sick days. As practitioners seeking to accomplish this goal, we recognize that use of sound science is necessary. Examples of Advocacy Activities within HIA What is perceived as advocacy varies based on the institutional context of practitioners. Advocacy is perceived as how stakeholders are engaged in the process and in HIA communications and dissemination. We describe activities that may be considered to be advocacy within HIA

Stakeholder Participation
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