Anna Mankell

Short presentation

I am a postdoctoral researcher in the Health Services Research group at the Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences. My background is in political science and my research interest involves the relationship between the state and civil society in healthcare, with a focus on public participation. My postdoctoral project involves coproduction with the local civil society and the role of trust in health-promoting efforts in segregated areas.

Keywords

  • civil society
  • individualization
  • marketization
  • participation
  • patient involvement
  • patient organizations
  • political representation

Biography

Research areas

Interested in the role of civil society in the welfare state.

Postdoc projet (2023-2025)

Community coproduction in Sweden - the role of trust for health promotion in segregated neighbourhoods

During the pandemic, it became apparent how neighborhoods characterized by low institutional trust have a low
tendency to use and be involved in health promotion and preventive services such as vaccination and testing.
One way for welfare actors to build relationships with these neighborhoods is to reach out to
the community level, and by involving citizens through for instance community coproduction. In the Swedish
welfare society, the community-level has not been an arena for welfare services due to the universalist welfare
model. This project aims to study how citizen involvement strategies directed towards the community, as
community coproduction, can be designed and used in a Swedish setting. The project uses theory trust to
understand the potential of community coproduction for health promotion purposes.

Dissertation project (2015-2021)

Collective Patient Participation: Patient Voice and Civil Society Organizations in Healthcare

Abstract:

The importance of engaging patients in the development of healthcare services and policy has received increasing attention over the last decades. However, this attention has mainly been directed towards various forms of involvement of individual patients. This dissertation shifts focus to the collective forms of patient participation and the specific values they bring. The overall aim of the dissertationis to explore how collective patient participation is shaped, in an increasingly individualized and marketized society. The articles included in the dissertation analyze aspects such as advocacy work, representation mechanisms and coproduction practices at different levels of healthcare. These aspects are studied from the perspective of civil society organizations navigating current social trends such as individualization and marketization. Taken together, the findings point to the importance of considering the preconditions of the individual patient to engage in patient participation in a collective form. This appears to be an important factor in the shaping of collective patient participation, as well as a potential challenge for both advocacy and representation. The findings also indicate that individual and collective forms of participation should not be seen as two conflicting interests, but could rather be mutually strengthening, something that should be considered both by civil society organizations and healthcare policymakers. Furthermore, this dissertation contributes to a better understanding of the diverse nature of patient participation, and how these variations all play important yet distinct roles in improving democratic and quality aspects of healthcare.

Publications

Recent publications

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Anna Mankell

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