7 March 2013

Does health impact assessment protect health? Is that the right question?

There's a thought-provoking piece at ABC Environment on Does environmental impact assessment protect the environment? The piece quotes several well-known Australian EIA academics about how well EIA in Australia is performing in terms of environmental protection.

There's no consensus in the piece about whether EIA is successfully protecting the environment or not, though some different ways of thinking about it are discussed. I think that's because the article dances around the core issue: what is the purpose of EIA? This may seem axiomatic and uncontested but I wonder if it's an under-examined difference between the goals and purpose of impact assessments.


In a sense we're lucky in the HIA field. The yoke of regulatory requirement and government mandate hasn't weighed us down too much... yet. Practice is still evolving and hasn't been circumscribed by regulations and legal challenge to the same extent as EIA. Because of this, my impression is that there's more acceptance that an HIA will probably have a limited impacts on health outcomes in itself. The stated goals of HIA are to protect health, promote health and to reduce health inequalities (and possibly to improve governance and public decision-making, as well as learning). HIA seeks to influence decision-making and implementation in order to influence a range of determinants of health, which in turn will impact on health outcomes, as shown below:


This is an idealised representation of an HIA's influence. Other assessment processes, organisational considerations and even broader social conditions will play much larger roles. In fact the process depicted is never linear either. Health outcomes and determinants are constantly changing, and decisions are constantly revisited. The delay between an activity and eventual health outcomes can sometimes stretch to decades. At each step there are a multitude of other factors that exert influence, apart from the HIA.

Though HIA's goal is to protect health, like EIA's is to protect the environment, the practical purpose of an HIA is to change decisions and implementation - the first step in the process depicted above. We should think about the purpose of EIA the same way. It's not an environmental intervention, it's a decision-making intervention. Burdening it with expectations of environmental protection isn't realistic.

If we do acknowledge that it will be difficult if not impossible for an HIA to demonstrate its role in changing health outcomes, we should redouble our efforts to prove its effectiveness in influencing decisions and implementation. I made a related argument in a recent article:

In some ways the issue of effectiveness may have less currency in relation to other forms of IA [than HIA]. Impact assessment, in particular environmental impact assessment, is used in some form in almost every country. Its use is common, accepted, well understood and not usually actively compared to other interventions or activities. This is not necessarily true for health impact assessment though because of the resource constraints and associated health disciplinary and epistemological concerns... if HIA's use is to continue to be supported in increasingly resource-constrained health systems that demand evidence of the comparative effectiveness of interventions.

The right question is not whether HIA changes health outcomes. Instead it's does HIA change decisions, implementation and ways of working?

2 comments:

  1. It's also possible that the value-add of IA is not fully reflected in the immediate decision (much less health outcomes). The partnerships, indicators and thinking IA promotes are the foundation for sustained healthy decision-making. Even if an IA doesn't change the immediate decision, it may well influence the next one. That should factor into any consideration of effectiveness (as you suggest in your eval framework). Despite the various typologies and purposes, every (H)IA - if true to IA principles - should yield some learnings and intermediate outcomes that increase the likelihood for ultimately healthier impacts. Why don't we first give attention to that propensity?

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  2. Joe, Nice point and I totally agree with what you say, there is often a drip drip effect rather than a big bang of change; evolution rather than revolution. The challenge is that policy and decision-makers don't like evaluations that say this they want a quantified and costed approach showing real benefits in very short and potentially unrealistic time periods i.e. resolving problems decades in the making in a year or two (or less).

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