Priority setting in times of crises: an analysis of priority setting for the COVID-19 response in the Western Pacific Region

•This study elucidates the use of priority setting during health emergencies.•In the initial pandemic response plans from a subset of Western Pacific Region countries, there is evidence of some explicit, but not systematic, priority setting that informed the initial response to the pandemic.•The fin...

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Published in:Health policy (Amsterdam) Vol. 142; p. 105010
Main Authors: Essue, Beverley M., Kapiriri, Lydia, Mohamud, Hodan, Vélez, Claudia-Marcela, Nouvet, Elysee, Aguilera, Bernardo, Williams, Iestyn, Kiwanuka, Suzanne
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Ireland Elsevier B.V 01-04-2024
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Summary:•This study elucidates the use of priority setting during health emergencies.•In the initial pandemic response plans from a subset of Western Pacific Region countries, there is evidence of some explicit, but not systematic, priority setting that informed the initial response to the pandemic.•The findings establish a baseline of the initial prioritized resources and populations in each setting and set the stage for evaluating how priorities were adapted and evolved in subsequent pandemic waves. While priority setting is recognized as critical for promoting accountability and transparency in health system planning, its role in supporting rational, equitable and fair pandemic planning and responses is less well understood. This study aims to describe how priority setting was used to support planning in the initial stage of the pandemic response in a subset of countries in the Western Pacific Region (WPR). We purposively sampled a subset of countries from WPR and undertook a critical document review of the initial national COVID-19 pandemic response plans. A pre-specified tool guided data extraction and the analysis examined the use of quality parameters of priority setting, and equity considerations. Nine plans were included in this analysis, from the following countries: Papua New Guinea, Tonga, The Philippines, Fiji, China, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Taiwan. Most commonly the plans described strong political will to respond swiftly, resource needs, stakeholder engagement, and defined the roles of institutions that guided COVID-19 response decision-making. The initial plans did not reflect strong evidence of public engagement or considerations of equity informing the early responses to the pandemic. This study advances an understanding of how priority setting and equity considerations were integrated to support the development of the initial COVID-19 responses in nine countries in WPR and contributes to the literature on health system planning during emergencies. This baseline assessment reveals evidence of the common priority setting parameters that were deployed in the initial responses, the prioritized resources and equity considerations and reinforces the importance of strengthening health system capacity for priority setting to support future pandemic preparedness.
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ISSN:0168-8510
1872-6054
DOI:10.1016/j.healthpol.2024.105010