Troutville: Where People Discuss Fairness Issues

Yukiko Asada, Robin Urquhart, Marion Brown, Grace Warner, Mary McNally, Andrea Murphy

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

2 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Context. Public engagement efforts in health policy have posed many value-laden questions, yet those that appreciate the complexity and diversity of the concept of health equity are rare. We introduce the Fairness Dialogues, a new method for deliberating health equity among the general public. We provide its theoretical underpinning and present its empirical illustration and qualitative assessment. Methods. Primarily informed by the scholarship of deliberation, we designed the Fairness Dialogues, featured by reason-giving and inclusive group deliberation using a hypothetical scenario (the town of Troutville) that presents carefully designed, simple, open-ended cases focusing on a chosen equity and fairness issue. To assess whether the Fairness Dialogues encourages reflective views, we conducted a qualitative investigation by focusing on fairness and unfairness of inequalities in life expectancy. Findings. Our results revealed the complex intuitions that people have and their curiosity, patience, and willingness to scrutinize them in-depth through a small group dialogue. Intuitions shared by our study participants are similar to those presented in the scholarly philosophical literature. Conclusions. The Fairness Dialogues is a promising method to incorporate the public’s views into policy-making involving value judgment and to develop the capacity of the public to discuss value-laden questions in a reflective and inclusive manner.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)70-82
Número de páginas13
PublicaciónCanadian Journal of Bioethics
Volumen3
N.º1
DOI
EstadoPublished - 2020

Nota bibliográfica

Funding Information:
Nous tenons à remercier les participants de notre étude et les We would like to thank our study participants and students who étudiants qui ont participé aux discussions de groupe et de groupe participated in the group and pilot group dialogues. We would also like pilote. Nous tenons également à remercier Emily Marshall, Hannah to thank Emily Marshall, Hannah Abel, Ole Norheim, Christy Simpson, Abel, Ole Norheim, Christy Simpson et Julia Abelson pour leurs and Julia Abelson for valuable comments and support for various précieux commentaires et leur soutien aux différentes étapes de la stages of the implementation of the study, and the peer-reviewers for mise en œuvre de l’étude et les évaluateurs pour leurs précieux valuable comments to an earlier version of this paper. This study was commentaires sur une version antérieure de cet article. Cette étude a supported by the Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation (grant été financée par la Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation (numéros numbers: PSO-REDI-201-9738 and PSO-DI-2015-10088) and de subvention: PSO-REDI-201-9738 et PSO-DI-2015-10088) et la Collaborative Research in Primary Health Care (CoR-PHC). The Collaborative Research in Primary Health Care (CoR-PHC). Ces funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, bailleurs de fonds n’ont joué aucun rôle dans la conception de l’étude, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. The views la collecte et l’analyse des données, la décision de publier ou la expressed in the article are those of the authors and not an official préparation du manuscrit. Les opinions exprimées dans l’article sont position of their institution or the funders. les opinions des auteurs et non une position officielle de leur institution ou des bailleurs de fonds.

Publisher Copyright:
© Yukiko Asada, Robin Urquhart, Marion Brown, Grace Warner,

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Health(social science)
  • Philosophy
  • Health Policy

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