Abstract

Connecting knowledge with action (KWA) for health equity involves interventions that can redistribute power and resources at local, national, and global levels. Although there is ample and compelling evidence on the nature, distribution, and impact of health inequities, advancing health equity is inhibited by policy arenas shaped by colonial legacies and neoliberal ideology. Effective progress toward health equity requires attention to evidence that can promote the kind of socio-political restructuring needed to address root causes of health inequities. In this critical interpretive synthesis, results of a recent scoping review were broadened to identify evidence-informed promising practices for KWA for health equity. Following screening procedures, 10 literature reviews and 22 research studies were included in the synthesis. Analysis involved repeated readings of these 32 articles to extract descriptive data, assess clarity and quality, and identify promising practices. Four distinct kinds of promising practices for connecting KWA for health equity were identified and included: ways of structuring systems, ways of working together, and ways of doing research and ways of doing knowledge translation. Our synthesis reveals that advancing health equity requires greater awareness, dialogue, and action that aligns with the what is known about the causes of health inequities. By critically reflecting on dominant discourses and assumptions, and mobilizing political will from a more informed and transparent democratic exercise, knowledge to action for health equity can be achieved.

Highlights

  • Health inequities are systematic differences in health at local, regional, national, and global levels [1–3], caused by the unfair distribution of resources, wealth, and power in society [4]

  • Research findings, and claims made by authors about strategies, facilitators or barriers, or approaches that demonstrate some degree of promise for connecting knowledge with action (KWA) for health equity equity action [23, 37, 39, 44, 47, 50]

  • These researchers found that deploying social determinants of health nurses within the healthcare system was a key determinant of the efficacy and direction of their health equity work

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Health inequities are systematic differences in health at local, regional, national, and global levels [1–3], caused by the unfair distribution of resources, wealth, and power in society [4]. They are unjust [5] and actionable [6, 7]. These barriers can lead to a focus on relieving the downstream symptoms, rather than interrupting the known causes of health inequities [13, 14]. Confronting this problem requires evidenceinformed strategies that support people to move toward

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call