AI Article Synopsis

  • Health care and academic institutions are adopting social accountability, pushing for collaboration with various partners to set priorities and evaluate outcomes.
  • This study aims to create a conceptual framework for a socially accountable learning health system by analyzing existing frameworks and conducting key informant interviews.
  • The developed framework outlines phases of social accountability, transitions, learning cycles, and how different actors contribute, serving as a tool to evaluate and track progress in social accountability across health and education systems.

Article Abstract

Health care and academic institutions are increasingly committing to social accountability, a strategic shift that requires priorities, activities, and evaluations to be co-determined with all relevant partners. Consequently, governments, accreditors, funders, and communities are calling for these institutions to communicate their progress towards social accountability. The purpose of this study was to develop a conceptual framework around a socially accountable learning health system. This article presents an integrated analysis of two studies: (i) a narrative review of 11 prominent social accountability and health services conceptual frameworks and (ii) a reflexive thematic analysis of 18 key informant interviews. Using a systematic conceptual framework development and integrated theory of change/realist evaluation methodologies, we describe a synthesis of these findings to develop a conceptual framework for describing and evaluating socially accountable health professional education. The resulting framework describes assessment phases of social accountability, transitions between phases, learning cycles, and the actors and systems that collectively mobilise social accountability at multiple levels in health and education systems. The framework can be used to evaluate interventions or characterise progress towards social accountability in different settings, as illustrated in the example at the end of the paper. The framework emphasises the significance of designing, mobilising, and evaluating social accountability as part of a contextualised learning health system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10087460PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hpm.3555DOI Listing

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