13
Exploring how HIA has impacted, policies, programs and the decision- making process in the U.S. Keshia M. Pollack, PhD, MPH Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Department of Health Policy and Management Baltimore, Maryland, USA 2011 XI HIA International Conference

Exploring how HIA has impacted, policies, programs and the decision-making process in the U.S. Keshia M. Pollack, PhD, MPH Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Exploring how HIA has impacted, policies, programs and the decision-making process in the U.S.

Keshia M. Pollack, PhD, MPHJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthDepartment of Health Policy and ManagementBaltimore, Maryland, USA

2011 XI HIA International Conference

Partners

• Pew Charitable Trust Health Impact Project – Aaron Wernham, Bethany Rogerson, Saqi Maleque Cho

• Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health– Greg Tung

• U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

– Andy Dannenberg, Arthur Wendel, Candace Rutt,

Sarah Kennedy, James Dills• San Francisco Department of Public Health

– Rajiv Bhatia

• Funded by Pew Charitable Trust Health Impact Project and JHSPH Faculty Innovation Award

Background

• HIA use is the U.S. is quickly expanding• Lots of people are doing HIAs…..

• What is the process?• What are the impacts?

Objective

To identify the range of HIAs completed in the U.S., the sector and geographical representation of the HIAs, and the resulting role the HIA played in changing a policy, program, or decision-making process.

Methods

• 91 HIAs identified through review of websites and survey of key stakeholders who self-identified as having completed a HIA in the U.S.

• We did not screen to confirm the HIA (main limitation)• Lead practitioners of 58 of the HIAs were contacted

and 50 were interviewed• Semi-structured interviews

– Various topics: define HIA, success, impact, failures,

challenges, community involvement, stakeholders,

participation by decisionmakers

How do authors define “success” in their HIAs?

• Health concerns into the discussion

• “Brought health concerns into the discussion”

• “Culture change: planning department is now routinely

considering health”

• “New partnerships between health and other

agencies”• Education of Policymakers

• “Educated decision-maker about how a policy that seemed

to have nothing to do with health, actually has health

consequences”

• “Decision-makers now routinely thinking about health”

How do authors define “success” in their HIAs?

• Impacts

• “HIA recommendations were 100% adopted into the

growth plan”

• “Influenced the final design of the project”

• Community

– “Addressed community concerns”

– “Increasing community awareness about HIA and

about how to use the results in their advocacy efforts”

Public participation and stakeholder engagement

• All reports were public• A substantial number reported some stakeholder

engagement (>50%)• At least 18 reported responding to comments on a draft

HIA

Varied approaches to stakeholder engagement

• Interviews with community leaders

• Community council, stakeholder advisory board

• Formal stakeholder survey

• Structured surveys

• Community coalition on HIA team

• Tribal org. writing HIA• Key informant interviews• Indirect: part of a

planning or EIS process – reading testimony from another process

Challenges and reasons that recommendations WERE NOT adopted

• Skepticism: health connections aren’t obvious, and to

non-health agencies, seem unlikely, distal, incredible.

• Regulatory limits: agency lacks authority to implement

recommendations; recommendations not written in

statutory/regulatory language

• Timing: HIA delivered after decision

• Political resistance: it’s new; it might change the power

dynamic.

• Political controversy around the target of the HIA –

“drowning out” the HIA results

Potential reasons why recommendations WERE adopted

• Strong stakeholder and community engagement• Timeliness of the HIA• Recommendations were clearly written and

supported by scientific evidence • High dissemination of findings

Conclusions

• HIAs have had several positive impacts and were successful

• Valuable information from the practitioner– Resources needed to conduct HIA, how to engage

stakeholders, and limitations and likely facilitators of

success and barriers to HIA use

• Likely some reporting bias– Need to triangulate with public documents and HIA

intended end-users• In-depth exploration of policy HIAs

Contact Information

Keshia [email protected]

410.502.6272