Table 1. Core Principles of the Citizen Health Care Model.
Core Principle | Rationale |
---|---|
1. The greatest untapped resource for improving health care is the knowledge, wisdom, and energy of individuals, families, and communities who face challenging health issues in their everyday lives. |
Instead of first looking to professional resources, we look to family and community resources. |
2. Families and communities are producers of health and health care, not just clients or consumers. |
This empowers families and communities to co-create health interventions, understandings, and influence in partnership with professionals. |
3. Health professionals are citizens, not just providers. | In this work, health professionals develop public skills as citizen professionals so that they can work in community groups with flattened hierarchies. |
4. Citizens drive programs, rather than programs servicing citizens. |
If you begin with an established program, you will not end up with an initiative that is “owned and operated” by citizens. But a citizen initiative might create or adopt a program as one of its activities. |
5. Local communities must retrieve their own historical, cultural, and religious traditions of health and healing. |
Each initiative should reflect the local culture in which it is positioned in order for the initiate to be co-owned; no two initiatives will look exactly alike. |
6. Citizen health initiatives should have a bold vision while working pragmatically on focused, specific projects. |
Think big, act practically, and let your light shine in order to sustain motivation. |