Litcius/Paper detail

Co-creation, co-design, co-production for public health – a perspective on definitions and distinctions

Carmen Vargas, Jillian Whelan, Julie Brimblecombe, Steven Allender

2022Public Health Research & Practice683 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Collaboration between community members, researchers, and policy makers drives efforts to solve complex health problems such as obesity, alcohol misuse, and type 2 diabetes. Community participation is essential to ensure the optimal design, implementation and evaluation of resulting initiatives. The terms 'co-creation', 'co-design' and 'co-production' have been used interchangeably to describe the development of initiatives involving multiple stakeholders. While commonalities exist across these concepts, they have essential distinctions for public health, particularly related to the role of stakeholders and the extent and timing of their engagement. We summarise these similarities and differences drawing from the cross-disciplinary literature, including public administration and governance, service management, design, marketing and public health. Co-creation is an overarching guiding principle encompassing co-design and co-production. A clear definition of these terms clarifies aspects of participatory action research for community-based public health initiatives.

Topics & Concepts

Public relationsProduction (economics)Co-creationPublic healthCorporate governanceCitizen journalismBusinessPerspective (graphical)Political scienceSociologyKnowledge managementMedicineComputer scienceMarketingEconomicsNursingArtificial intelligenceFinanceMacroeconomicsLawHealth Policy Implementation ScienceMental Health and Patient InvolvementGlobal Public Health Policies and Epidemiology