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OP120 Developing A Call To Action For Patient Involvement In Health Technology Assessment (HTA) In Southern Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 December 2023

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Abstract

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Introduction

In building health technology assessment (HTA) and related decision processes in Southern Africa, institutions and stakeholders face region-specific challenges such as disease prevalence and population makeup. These can be addressed by collaboratively discussing patient engagement solutions that fit the local culture and systems and serve to ensure equitable and sustainable access to patient-relevant health technologies. Our aim is to initiate a collaboration for driving patient involvement (PI) suitable for the Southern African context and Sub-Saharan patient communities. In addition, we explore current experiences in PI, including the stakeholder expectations, gaps, limitations, and new opportunities.

Methods

A one-day hybrid multi-stakeholder PI in HTA workshop was held in Johannesburg, South Africa. Co-created by the participants, the outputs are a call to action and a concept draft for the vital success criteria for PI in the region. The content of the call to action is gathered from pre-workshop surveys, interviews, and outcomes from historic meetings held in conjunction with the Health Technology Assessment International (HTAi) PI workstream as well as facilitated discussion from the actual workshop.

Results

The workshop was attended by 42 participants from nine countries, representing diverse stakeholder groups. The attendees represented multiple PI stakeholder groups. The workshop survey was completed by 44 respondents, while 12 participants completed the post-event survey. A workshop outcomes document highlighting a high level of alignment and identifying seven key success factors was developed. A workshop proceeding detailing the outcomes is now being drafted.

Conclusions

Over 95 percent of respondents to pre-and post-surveys indicated an interest in contributing to a more in-depth description of PI in their country. While the majority of participants were from South Africa, participants from Tanzania, Ethiopia, Zambia, and Zimbabwe emphasized that trans-African-engagement for HTA will provide an additional opportunity for HTA in Africa and patient and community participation in HTA and healthcare decision-making. Hence, a collaborative platform could help all African countries to advance and benefit from improved healthcare decision processes.

Type
Oral Presentations
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press