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Unlocking Community Capabilities Across Health Systems in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Lessons Learned from Research and Reflective Practice

Published on 15 November 2016

The right and responsibility of communities to participate in health service delivery was enshrined in the 1978 Alma Ata declaration and continues to feature centrally in health systems debates today. Communities are a vital part of people-centred health systems and their engagement is critical to realizing the diverse health targets prioritised by the Sustainable Development Goals and the commitments made to Universal Health Coverage.

Community members’ intimate knowledge of local needs and adaptive capacities are essential in constructively harnessing global transformations related to epidemiological and demographic transitions, urbanization, migration, technological innovation and climate change.

Effective community partnerships and governance processes that underpin community capability also strengthen local resilience, enabling communities to better manage shocks, sustain gains, and advocate for their needs through linkages to authorities and services. This is particularly important given how power relations mark broader contexts of resource scarcity and concentration, struggles related to social liberties and other types of ongoing conflicts.

Cite this publication

George, A.S., Scott, K., Sarriot, E., Kanjilal, B. and Peters, D.H., 2016. Unlocking community capabilities across health systems in low-and middle-income countries: lessons learned from research and reflective practice. BMC Health Services Research, 16(7), p.43.

Publication details

authors
George, A.S., Scott, K., Sarriot, E., Kanjilal, B. and Peters, D.H.
journal
BMC Health Services Research, issue 16
language
English

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