Effective Consumer Voice and Participation for New Zealand: A Systematic Review of the Evidence

Effective Consumer Voice and Participation for New…
01 Nov 2006
pdf

The report provides an evidence-based summary of:

  • international and New Zealand literature on consumer voice and consumer participation in the health sector
  • current consumer participation activities in the health sector in New Zealand
  • international models of consumer bodies and networks.

The report was commissioned to inform consumers, policy makers/funders and health care providers, so that options for active health consumer participation can move forward.

Purpose

 

  • To strengthen the consumer sector in New Zealand
  • To improve participation of health and disability consumers in decision-making within the health sector.

Key Results

 

  • In New Zealand community involvement in health is a very long-standing tradition
  • New Zealand lacks a strong national consumer voice and there is no organised system of networking or sharing information within the sector or for government agencies or providers to engage with consumers
  • There is some evidence, particularly from Australia, the UK, and the USA, that consumer participation can lead to improvements in health services
  • Independent advocacy is another form of participation that can occur alongside involvement in the health sector
  • A strong consumer sector needs government support and acknowledgement
  • Participation should be a partnership at every stage. Only through power-sharing will participation deliver the benefits which everyone in the health sector hopes for
  • The Consumers’ Health Forum of Australia provides a good model for a national consumer body
  • An alternative model would be a consortium approach, with representatives of disability and mental health national bodies combining in some way with health consumers.
Page last modified: 15 Mar 2018