European Public Health Week 2026: Why defining advocacy matters (and why we almost took it for granted)
Published in Public Health, Behavioural Sciences & Psychology, and Arts & Humanities
In health and public health, advocacy is one of those words that feels immediately familiar.
It appears everywhere: in conversations about health equity, patient engagement, professional responsibility, policy change, and community action. It is present in institutional strategies, training frameworks, and everyday professional language. It is widely treated as something essential, almost self-evident.
And yet, as European Public Health Week 2026 invites us to reflect on how health systems can become more equitable, participatory, and responsive, a fundamental question becomes harder to ignore: do we really share a clear understanding of what advocacy means?
When we began working on this paper, we thought we did. But the more we explored the literature, the less certain we became.
That realization was not immediate. At first, advocacy seemed like a stable concept - widely used, broadly understood. But as we started examining the literature more systematically, a different picture emerged. Advocacy was not only central to many discussions in healthcare and public health; it was also surprisingly underdefined.
This tension - between importance and ambiguity - became the starting point of our study.
A simple question that turned out to be complex
We began with what seemed like a straightforward question:
What do we actually mean when we talk about advocacy in public health and healthcare?
This was not just a conceptual curiosity. It had very practical implications. Across many contexts, advocacy is increasingly expected - from health professionals, patient representatives, community leaders, and civil society actors. It is often described as a core competence, a professional duty, or even an ethical imperative.
But if something is expected, it should also be clear enough to be supported, taught, and evaluated.
Otherwise, it risks remaining a powerful but vague idea - something we all agree is important, but struggle to translate into practice.
Looking across disciplines and practices
To explore this issue, we conducted a scoping review across multiple domains, including healthcare, public health, education, and social and policy research.
Rather than focusing on a single profession or type of action, we deliberately took a broad perspective. Advocacy is not confined to one role or setting, and we wanted to reflect that diversity. In total, we included 146 documents.
What we found was both reassuring and challenging.
A shared vision - at least in principle
On one level, the literature was remarkably consistent.
Across different contexts, advocacy was closely associated with values such as equity, social justice, participation, and systemic change. It was rarely described as simply helping individuals navigate services. More often, it was framed as something broader: a way to address structural barriers, amplify marginalized voices, influence institutions, and connect lived experiences with decision-making processes.
In that sense, there was a strong shared vision. Advocacy was presented as a necessary component of more inclusive and responsive health systems.
But many meanings, many roles, many practices
At the same time, however, this coherence did not extend to definitions or operational models.
Advocacy could mean many different things: supporting individual patients, mobilizing communities, engaging in policy processes, initiating legal action, working with the media, or contributing to education and awareness.
It could be carried out by healthcare professionals, patient groups, community actors, or organizations. It could take place at the bedside, in local communities, or at national and international policy levels.
This diversity is not a problem in itself. On the contrary, it reflects the richness and adaptability of advocacy.
But it also creates a challenge.
When a single term is used to describe such a wide range of activities, without sufficient conceptual clarity, it becomes difficult to build shared expectations. What does advocacy actually require? What are its boundaries? What should it achieve?
These questions are not always explicitly addressed.
The missing piece: how do we evaluate advocacy?
This lack of clarity became even more evident when we looked at evaluation.
Although advocacy is widely recognized as important, very few studies reported concrete ways to assess it. Only a small minority of the papers we included referred to specific measurement tools - and none of these was standardized.
In many cases, advocacy seemed to function as a normative concept: something that should matter, rather than something that is systematically examined.
For us, this was one of the most striking findings.
It suggests that while advocacy has gained visibility and legitimacy, the methodological tools needed to support it have not developed at the same pace.
Growing expectations, uneven foundations
This gap becomes particularly relevant in the current context.
Health systems are increasingly called to be more participatory, more inclusive, and more responsive. There is growing emphasis on patient involvement, community engagement, and equity-oriented approaches.
Advocacy is often positioned at the heart of these transformations.
And yet, the infrastructures that would allow advocacy to be practiced, supported, and evaluated in a consistent way remain uneven. Expectations are rising, but the conceptual and methodological foundations are still fragmented.
From mapping to proposing a way forward
Our goal, therefore, was not only to map how advocacy is described in the literature, but also to contribute to a more structured conversation about its future.
Based on our findings, we developed a preliminary framework for equity-oriented public health advocacy. This framework brings together several interconnected dimensions:
- a clear normative grounding in values such as equity and justice
- a multilevel perspective that connects individual, community, and systemic action
- attention to relational and communicative practices
- the development of critical and systemic literacy
- a form of professionalism that includes reflexivity and civic agency
- and, importantly, mechanisms for evaluation and accountability
We do not present this as a definitive model. Rather, it is a starting point—a way to make the concept of advocacy more explicit, more discussable, and more operational.
Beyond “speaking up”
One of the risks we identified is reducing advocacy to a generic idea of “speaking up.”
While voice is certainly important, advocacy is more complex than that.
It involves navigating relationships, understanding systems, interpreting contexts, and connecting individual or collective experiences with broader institutional change. It requires not only motivation, but also knowledge, skills, and supportive environments.
If these dimensions remain implicit, advocacy may continue to be celebrated in principle while under-supported in practice.
A shared space between professions and society
Another important insight from our review is that advocacy does not belong to a single group.
It is not only the responsibility of individual professionals, nor is it confined to formal institutions. It exists at the intersection of professional roles, civic action, and public accountability.
This is precisely why defining it more clearly matters.
Clarification is not about limiting advocacy, but about making it more visible, more teachable, and more sustainable.
A final reflection
As a scoping review, our study does not resolve all the ambiguities surrounding advocacy. Nor should it. Different contexts will always call for different forms of action.
But if there is one message we hope readers will take away, it is this:
Advocacy has become too important to remain conceptually vague.
Defining it more carefully is not just an academic exercise. It is part of building health systems that are more equitable, more accountable, and more connected to the realities of the people they serve.
And perhaps, in the end, that is what advocacy is really about.
Follow the Topic
-
International Journal for Equity in Health
This journal presents evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries and publishes research which improves the understanding of issues that influence the distribution of health and healthcare within populations.
Related Collections
With Collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.
Migration and its effects on maternal and child health and nutrition
International Journal for Equity in Health is hosting a cross-journal Collection in collaboration with the Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition.
This cross-journal Collection is seeking contributions showcasing research on the intersection of migration and maternal and child health and nutrition. Both forced and voluntary migration have become a global phenomenon with profound implications for mothers' and children’s health, nutrition, and overall well-being. This special edition will highlight diverse methodological approaches, including qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-methods studies, that contribute to a deeper understanding of health inequities among migrant populations and offer potential solutions to mitigate them.
This special issue aims to bridge gaps in the evidence base and promote research incorporating diverse disciplinary perspectives and methodological synergies. We welcome theoretical, review, and empirical contributions that enhance our understanding of the complex social, political, economic, and cultural determinants shaping the health of migrant women and children. In addition to the mentioned methodologies, several others can be incorporated to strengthen this research. Participatory and community-based methods, such as participatory action research (PAR), involve affected communities in all stages of the research process, ensuring relevance and applicability. Qualitative and ethnographic approaches, including in-depth interviews and focus groups, provide a deeper understanding of the cultural and social contexts influencing health. Longitudinal studies track health outcomes over time, offering insights into the long-term effects of migration. An intersectional approach considers how multiple identity factors intersect and affect health. Social network analysis explores the role of social connections in accessing healthcare and resources. Policy analysis methods assess how national and international policies impact migrant health, while big data and spatial analysis reveal trends across different regions and contexts. We encourage submissions that engage with affected communities, apply innovative methodological frameworks, and inform policy and practice.
Submissions may include, but are not limited to, the following areas:
Health disparities in migrant populations:
- Examining health inequities affecting migrant mothers and children.
- Identifying key determinants of health disparities in various migration contexts.
Nutritional challenges and interventions:
- Assessing the nutritional status of migrant mothers and children.
- Evaluating policies, interventions, and strategies aimed at addressing nutritional challenges among migrant populations.
Impact of migration policies:
- Analyzing how migration policies influence maternal and child health outcomes.
- Investigating the role of legal frameworks in shaping access to healthcare and nutrition for migrant populations.
Psychosocial well-being:
- Exploring the psychosocial effects of migration on maternal and child health.
- Assessing the role of social support systems in mitigating mental health challenges.
Community health and resilience:
- Investigating community-based approaches to improve the health and resilience of migrant populations.
- Understanding the role of cultural adaptation and integration in health outcomes.
Health systems and access to care:
- Examining how health systems address the needs of migrant mothers and children.
-Identifying innovative approaches to enhance healthcare accessibility and equity for migrant populations.
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 5, Gender Equality.
This collection is open for submissions from all authors on the condition that the manuscript falls within both the scope of the collection and the journal it is submitted to.
All submissions in this collection undergo the relevant journal’s standard peer review process. Similarly, all manuscripts authored by a Guest Editor(s) will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief of the relevant journal. As an open access publication, participating journals levy an article processing fee (International Journal for Equity in Health, Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition). We recognize that many key stakeholders may not have access to such resources and are committed to supporting participation in this issue wherever resources are a barrier. For more information about what support may be available, please visit OA funding and support, or email OAfundingpolicy@springernature.com or the Editor-in-Chief of the journal where the article is being submitted.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Jul 31, 2026
Racism and Health
The ongoing advancement of our understanding of how racism impacts health - both directly and structurally - is crucial for addressing the deep-rooted health inequities that persist globally. Structural racism shapes health outcomes among racialized populations, contributing to inequities in healthcare access and quality, and impacting social, political, or environmental determinants of health. Existing research also connects direct and visible manifestations of racism, such as major and everyday discrimination, to negative health outcomes. At the same time, racism does not operate in isolation. A growing body of research shows how it intersects with other systems of oppression—such as classism and patriarchy—and with broader social determinants of health, producing compounded and context-specific inequities. An intersectional lens is therefore essential to understand how overlapping structures of power and exclusion shape health and healthcare experiences. These insights are essential in conducting rigorous and thorough health research, guiding anti-racist health policy, and ultimately, ensuring equitable health for all.
Looking forward, research holds the potential to develop new methodologies and indices and unveil complexities in how racism manifests within healthcare systems and societal structures. By deepening our collective understanding, we can develop more effective interventions that target the root causes of health inequities.
We invite researchers to contribute to this special Collection on Racism and Health, focusing on advancing our understanding and addressing health inequities. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
- Racism as a structural determinant of health
- Racism as a direct determinant of health
- Racialized health outcomes in different populations
- Intersectionality and inequities in health, healthcare access and quality
- Nexuses between social, political, and environmental determinants of health and systemic discrimination
- Anti-racist health policy frameworks and systems
- Impact of racism on mental health
- Health inequities in reproductive, maternal, and child health
- Obstetric and reproductive violence
- Community-based interventions for equitable health
- Decolonizing health research and global health epistemologies
We strongly encourage contributions from racialized scholars and authors with lived experience or expertise in addressing systemic discrimination in health research.
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3, Good Health and Well-Being and SDG 10, Reduced Inequalities.
All submissions in this collection undergo the journal’s standard peer review process. Similarly, all manuscripts authored by a Guest Editor(s) will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief. As an open access publication, this journal levies an article processing fee (details here). We recognize that many key stakeholders may not have access to such resources and are committed to supporting participation in this issue wherever resources are a barrier. For more information about what support may be available, please visit OA funding and support, or email OAfundingpolicy@springernature.com or the Editor-in-Chief.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Aug 14, 2026
Please sign in or register for FREE
If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in