Introduction
The 19th World Rural Health Conference, hosted in rural Ireland and the University of Limerick in June this year, with over 650 participants coming from 40 countries and an additional 1600 engaging online, carefully considered how best rural communities can be empowered to improve their own health and the health of those around them. The conference also considered the role of national health systems and all stakeholders, in keeping with the commitments made through the Sustainable Development Goals and the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health as one of the fundamental rights of every human,. The conference was addressed by experts in rural health from all regions of the world. This conference declaration is in response to the Blueprint for Rural Health (the declaration from the 17th World Rural Health Conference in Bangladesh) and the Rural Nursing and Midwifery Albuquerque Statement 2019, which were designed to inform rural communities, academics and policymakers about how to achieve the goal of delivering high quality health care in rural and remote areas most effectively. This statement is also in support of World Health Assembly Resolution 72.2 on primary health care, which calls on all stakeholders to provide support to member states in mobilising human, technological, financial and information resources to help build strong and sustainable primary health care, as envisaged in the Declaration of Astana.
Guiding principles based on Blueprint for Rural Health
Globally, an estimated 2 billion people living in rural areas do not have adequate access to essential health services, which adversely affects health outcomes and is a driving cause of health inequities experienced by rural populations. These inequities undermine human potential and national developmental trajectories, and are implicated in the weakening of national social cohesion. Rural communities also have important strengths and assets, which can play a key role in contributing to robust national health systems and inclusive societies. The 19th World Rural Health Conference, its partners and hosting organisations (Appendix 1) assert the right of rural communities to equitable access to health care in the following ways.
Rural healthcare needs and delivery
Equitable access to rural health care should be based on the regular assessment of community needs, address all basic healthcare needs, and be based around a comprehensive, locally based healthcare infrastructure linked to effective referral systems. Patient-centred care pathways should be co-designed with rural communities and enhanced, but not replaced, by technology, and delivered locally by multidisciplinary teams. Attention must be given to understanding the supply-side and demand-side factors driving inequitable access, and addressing barriers to quality health services across the pathway.
Rural workforce
A sustainable rural health workforce should where possible emanate from the local communities they serve and be incentivised, supported, mentored and valued throughout the career pathway. Social accountability should be a key underlying principle for higher educational institutions, which should orientate their training, research and service provision to populations living in rural and remote areas. The WHO Guideline on Health Workforce Development, Attraction, Recruitment and Retention Rural and Remote Areas highlights the importance of interconnected, bundled and whole-of-society approaches to rural service delivery, tailored to the local context. This should be based on pillars of equity, diversity and inclusion, with gender as a key area of focus. Furthermore, full scope of practice in rural generalism for all professional groups should be actively promoted.
Advocacy and policy
Policy for rural health should include people living in rural communities and rural organisations as key stakeholders and equal partners whose needs and views are sought and who participate in decision making as key informants about rural health. Government health policies, strategies, plans, programs and financing modalities should be ‘rural-proofed’ to mitigate any deleterious effects of these in rural areas, particularly in the areas of social and environmental determinants of rural health. This term refers to the systematic application of a rural lens to policies and other actions, to ensure that they are adequately accounting for the needs, contexts and opportunities of rural areas.
Governments should develop a unified policy to promote rural health, inclusive of rural-proofing approaches at national, regional and local levels. This is in keeping with wider cross-sectoral approaches to rural development and revitalisation of rural areas as essential for cohesive, equitable sustainable development,. A successful and sustainable rural health sector requires intersectoral collaboration for the many dimensions of primary health care, including but not limited to investment in training and career pathways, hence creating a desirable workplace that healthcare workers will commit to for the longer term.
Research forrural health care
The rural dimension often continues to be neglected in analyses of risk factors for ill health, health status and health system performance. Health research needs to be rural-proofed, with a designated percentage of funding ring-fenced for this purpose. The media also have an important role in sharing research outcomes, to build national awareness of the issues facing rural communities and opportunities for greater national inclusion and societal wellbeing. Further research on the economic contribution of the health sector to rural and local development is also timely, given the economic multiplier effect of investments in the health sector. This can be underpinned by actively embedding research and data collection to demonstrate a better understanding of the value of rural and remote multidisciplinary led care in primary health settings.
Irish rural health care
The conference participants recognise:
Congruent with current evidence and best international practice,, the participants of the conference endorse the following recommendations for the creation of a high quality, sustainable and cost-effective healthcare delivery for rural communities in Ireland.
Rural healthcare needs and delivery
All participants in this conference and the partner organisations commit to proactively adopting these principles and actions to strengthen the current Irish rural healthcare workforce, including our pandemic response, while creating novel opportunities for rural health care to serve our communities
Equal access to health care is a crucial marker of democracy. Hence we call not only on the Irish Government, but on all governments, policymakers, academic institutions and communities globally, to commit to providing their rural dwellers with equitable access to health care that is properly resourced and fundamentally patient-centred in its design.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to all participants of the 19th World Rural Health Conference whose deliberations and exchanges across the conference informed this document. In addition, we would like to thank Theadora Swift Koller, a senior technical advisor working on rural health equity at WHO headquarters, for her review of declaration drafts. Finally, we would like to thank Monica Casey, Senior Administrator at the School of Medicine, University of Limerick for coordinating the formation and submission of the declaration.
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Liam Glynn1 MD, Professor of General Practice and General Practitioner
Andrew W Murphy2 MD, Professor of General Practice
Robert Scully3 MD, Deputy Director, Scottish Graduate Entry Medical Programme (ScotGEM) / Honorary Senior Lecturer, University of St Andrews
Roger Strasser4 MBBS, MClSc, FRACGP, FACRRM, Emeritus Professor of Rural Health, University of Waikato, New Zealand; Professor of Rural Health, Founding Dean Emeritus, NOSM University, Canada
Diarmuid Quinlan5 MICGP, FRCGP, BSc, LLM, GP Glanmire, Cork, Ireland; Medical Director, Irish College of General Practitioners
Jerry Cowley6 MRCGP, MICGP, LLB, BL, Chairman Rural Island & Dispensing Doctors of Ireland
Peter Hayes7 MD, General Practitioner and Senior Lecturer in General Practice
Patrick O’Donnell8 MB, BCh, BAO, MSc, Clinical Fellow in Social Inclusion
Andrew O’Regan9 PhD, General Practitioner and Senior Lecturer in General Practice
Shagun Tuli10 MBBS, MGHD, Student
Marcela A de Oliveira Santana 11 MD
Victoria M Sparrow-Downes12 MD, MSc, CCFP Family Physician at Pangnirtung Community Health Centre & Qikiqtani General Hospital; Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine at Memorial University of Newfoundland
Ferdinando Petrazzuoli13 PhD, MD
Shelley Nowlan14 MHM, BN, ACN (Fellow), Deputy Australian National Rural Health Commissioner Australia; Chief Nursing and Midwifery Officer, Queensland Health Australia
Claire Collins15 PhD, Director of Research, Irish College of General Practitioners; Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health, Ghent University
Frank Fogarty16 MICGP, MRCGP, MMed Sc, FFSEM(Ireland), FFSEM(Malaysia), General Practitioner
Anne MacFarlane17 PhD, Professor of Primary Healthcare Research; Director, Public and Patient Involvement Research Unit and WHO Collaborating Centre for Migrants’ Involvement in Health Research
John Wynn-Jones18 BSc, MBBS, FRCGP, Senior Lecturer; Visiting Professor
Alan Bruce Chater19 MBBS, FACRRM, FRACGP, DRANZCOG Adv, Mayne Professor of Rural and Remote Medicine
1 SLÁINTE Research and Education Alliance in General Practice, Primary Healthcare and Public Health, School of Medicine, Faculty of Education and Health Sciences, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland; Health Research Institute, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland; and Health Research Board Primary Care Clinical Trials Network Ireland
2 Department of General Practice, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland; and Health Research Board Primary Care Clinical Trials Network Ireland
3 School of Medicine, Medical and Biological Sciences Building, St Andrews KY69TF Fife, Scotland
4 Rural Health, University of Waikato; and Rural Health and Founding Dean Emeritus Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM), Sudbury, ON, Canada
5 Woodview Family Doctors, Glanmire, Cork, Ireland; and Irish College of General Practitioners, Dublin, Ireland
6 Institute of Rural Health Ltd t/a Rural, Island & Dispensing Doctors of Ireland; and Mulranny Surgery, Mulranny, County Mayo, Ireland
7, 8, 9 School of Medicine, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland
10 University of Global Health Equity, Rwanda
11 Federal University of Uberlândia, Uberlândia, Minas Gerais, Brazil; and Rural WONCA Rural Seeds Ambassador – Ibero America
12 Department of Family Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada
13 European Rural and Isolated Practitioners Association Scientific Board; and Center for Primary Health Care Research, Department of Clinical Sciences, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden
14 School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Qld, Australia; School of Nursing, Faculty of Health, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Qld, Australia; School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Southern Queensland, Ipswich, Qld, Australia; School of Medicine, Griffith University, Brisbane, Qld, Australia; and Association Queensland Nursing and Midwifery Leaders
15 Irish College of General Practitioners, Dublin, Ireland; and Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
16 Rural, Island and Dispensing Doctors of Ireland
17 School of Medicine, Faculty of Education and Health Sciences, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland; and Health Research Institute, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland
18 Rural and Global Health, Keele Medical School, UK
19 Rural WONCA (WONCA Working Party on Rural Practice); and Mayne Academy of Rural and Remote Medicine, Rural and Remote Medicine Clinical Unit, University of Queensland, Herston, Qld, Australia
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Abstract
Rural healthcare needs and delivery Equitable access to rural health care should be based on the regular assessment of community needs, address all basic healthcare needs, and be based around a comprehensive, locally based healthcare infrastructure linked to effective referral systems. Attention must be given to understanding the supply-side and demand-side factors driving inequitable access, and addressing barriers to quality health services across the pathway. Research forrural health care The rural dimension often continues to be neglected in analyses of risk factors for ill health, health status and health system performance. There exist great opportunities to enhance the health system’s capacity to meet the needs of rural communities, in keeping with government priorities for an inclusive Irish society, and to have the health sector contribute to economic growth in rural communities as part of a rural revitalisation agenda.
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer
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