How do we best engage young people in decision‑making about their health? A scoping review of deliberative priority setting methods
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BioMed Central
Abstract
Introduction International organisations have called to increase young people’s involvement in healthcare and
health policy development. We currently lack effective methods for facilitating meaningful engagement by young
people in health-related decision-making. The purpose of this scoping review is to identify deliberative priority
setting methods and explore the effectiveness of these in engaging young people in healthcare and health policy
decision-making.
Methods Seven databases were searched systematically, using MeSH and free text terms, for articles published in
English before July 2021 that described the use of deliberative priority setting methods for health decision-making
with young people. All titles, abstracts and full-text papers were screened by a team of six independent reviewers
between them. Data extraction followed the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination guidelines. The results are presented as a narrative synthesis, structured around four components for evaluating deliberative processes: 1) representation and inclusion of diverse participants, 2) the way the process is run including levels and timing of participant
engagement, 3) the quality of the information provided to participants and 4) resulting outcomes and decisions.
Findings The search yielded 9 reviews and 21 studies. The more engaging deliberative priority setting tools involved
young people-led committees, mixed methods for identifying and prioritising issues and digital data collection and
communication tools. Long-term and frequent contact with young people to build trust underpinned the success of
some of the tools, as did offering incentives for taking part and skills development using creative methods. The review
also suggests that successful priority setting processes with young people involve consideration of power dynamics, since young people’s decisions are likely to be made together with family members, health professionals and
academics.
Discussion Young people’s engagement in decision-making about their health is best achieved through investing
time in building strong relationships and ensuring young people are appropriately rewarded for their time and contribution. If young people are to be instrumental in improving their health and architects of their own futures, decisionmaking processes need to respect young people’s autonomy and agency. Our review suggests that methods of power-sharing with young people do exist but that they have yet to be adopted by organisations and global institutions setting global health policy.
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Citation
Watson, D., Mhlaba, M., Molelekeng, G., Chauke, T. A., Simao, S. C., Jenner, S., Ware, L. J., & Barker, M. (2023). How do we best engage young people in decision-making about their health? A scoping review of deliberative priority setting methods. International journal for equity in health, 22(1), 17. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-022-01794-2