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This paper reports on the process used to embark on one of the core strategies of Abu Dhabi’s Department of Health, which was to develop a roadmap for HTA implementation and institutionalization, based on the aspirations and needs of local stakeholders and making use of the evidence-informed deliberative processes framework. The paper also highlights the main features of the road map that may be expected to address some of the current challenges.
Methods
A series of activities were undertaken that informed the subsequent development of the roadmap. They comprised a situation analysis using a combination of desk research and semistructured (group) interviews with 45 stakeholders. The findings were discussed in two workshops; face-to-face with nonindustry stakeholders from Abu Dhabi, and online with industry representatives.
Results
Guided by the EDP framework, the roadmap provides instructions how to organize stakeholder involvement, how to identify and operationalize decision criteria, and how to ensure that the decision-making process is transparent. Specific guidance is given on establishing an HTA structure with an appropriate policy framework, the formulation of an HTA program, a communication strategy, as well as building and leveraging HTA expertise.
Conclusion
Broad stakeholder consultation has been instrumental toward the establishment of a comprehensive HTA framework in Abu Dhabi, and the development of a road map. The interest raised during stakeholder consultations and the commitments made hold promise for the adoption and establishment of EDP principles to support HTA in Abu Dhabi that have potential to contribute to a sustainable high-quality healthcare system.
This chapter examines the intersection between Trucial States, Iran, and the British during the interwar years with a particular emphasis on the crises of 1926‒1929. The events surrounding Iran's reoccupation of Hengam in 1928 and capture of an Arab dhow off the coast of Greater Tunb Island can serve as an apt example of how the Arab rulers and merchants of the Gulf perceived Iran and the British during the interwar years. The chapter concludes with an examination of the shifting power distribution within the shaykhdoms in the 1930s, due to the collapse of the pearl industry and the rise of revenues from air and oil agreements, with particular attention to the position of the Iranian immigrant communities in the Trucial States
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