Empowerment in healthcare policy making: three domains of substantive controversy
Luca Chiapperino A B D and Per-Anders Tengland CA European Institute of Oncology, via Adamello 16, 20139 Milan, Italy.
B Italian Institute of Technology, via Adamello 16, 20139 Milan, Italy.
C Faculty of Health and Society, Jan Waldenströms gata 25, Malmö University, 205 06 Malmö, Sweden.
D Corresponding author. Email: luca.chiapperino@ieo.eu
Health Promotion Journal of Australia 26(3) 210-215 https://doi.org/10.1071/HE15035
Submitted: 8 May 2015 Accepted: 19 October 2015 Published: 10 December 2015
Abstract
This paper distinguishes between the uses of empowerment across different contexts in healthcare policy and health promotion, providing a model for the ethical and political scrutiny of those uses. We argue that the controversies currently engendered by empowerment are better understood by means of a historical distinction between two concepts of empowerment, namely, what we call the radical empowerment approach and the new wave of empowerment. Building on this distinction, we present a research agenda for ethicists and policy makers, highlighting three domains of controversy raised by the new wave of empowerment, namely: (1) the relationship between empowerment and paternalistic interferences on the part of professionals; (2) the evaluative commitment of empowerment strategies to the achievement of health-related goals; and (3) the problems arising from the emphasis on responsibility for health in recent uses of empowerment. Finally, we encourage the explicit theorisation of these moral controversies as a necessary step for the development and implementation of ethically legitimate empowerment processes.
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