BMC Health Services Research | |
Elusive implementation: an ethnographic study of intersectoral policymaking for health | |
Susanne Boch Waldorff1  Morten Hulvej Rod2  Ditte Heering Holt3  Tine Tjørnhøj-Thomsen3  | |
[1] Copenhagen Business School, Department of Organization;Metropolitan University College, National Research Centre for Disadvantaged Children and Young People;University of Southern Denmark, National Institute of Public Health; | |
关键词: Intersectoral policymaking; Intersectoral collaboration; Health in all policies; Policy process; Implementation; Municipal health promotion; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s12913-018-2864-9 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
Abstract Background For more than 30 years policy action across sectors has been celebrated as a necessary and viable way to affect the social factors impacting on health. In particular intersectoral action on the social determinants of health is considered necessary to address social inequalities in health. However, despite growing support for intersectoral policymaking, implementation remains a challenge. Critics argue that public health has remained naïve about the policy process and a better understanding is needed. Based on ethnographic data, this paper conducts an in-depth analysis of a local process of intersectoral policymaking in order to gain a better understanding of the challenges posed by implementation. To help conceptualize the process, we apply the theoretical perspective of organizational neo-institutionalism, in particular the concepts of rationalized myth and decoupling. Methods On the basis of an explorative study among ten Danish municipalities, we conducted an ethnographic study of the development of a municipal-wide implementation strategy for the intersectoral health policy of a medium-sized municipality. The main data sources consist of ethnographic field notes from participant observation and interview transcripts. Results By providing detailed contextual description, we show how an apparent failure to move from policy to action is played out by the ongoing production of abstract rhetoric and vague plans. We find that idealization of universal intersectoralism, inconsistent demands, and doubts about economic outcomes challenge the notion of implementation as moving from rhetoric to action. Conclusion We argue that the ‘myth’ of intersectoralism may be instrumental in avoiding the specification of action to implement the policy, and that the policy instead serves as a way to display and support good intentions and hereby continue the process. On this basis we expand the discussion on implementation challenges regarding intersectoral policymaking for health.
【 授权许可】
Unknown