Literature DB >> 20587601

Disempowered doctors? A relational view of public health policy implementation in urban India.

Kabir Sheikh1, John D H Porter.   

Abstract

This article analyses the nature of power relationships between urban hospital practitioners and other groups of actors involved in the implementation of public health policies in India, and the effects of enacting different strategies to strengthen implementation, in the context of these balances of power. It is based on an empirical research study conducted over 18 months in five Indian cities involving 61 in-depth interviews with medical practitioners and policy actors, and an interpretivist analytical approach. An issue case study-of the implementation of national HIV testing guidelines-was used to focus the interviews on specific events and phenomena. Respondents' accounts revealed that practitioners in both private and government hospitals tended to successfully resist or subvert the attempts of regulators and administrators to enforce the guidelines. However, in spite of often possessing perspectives and convictions that differed from the nationally sanctioned guidelines, practitioners were not able to effectively communicate these ideas to other health systems actors, or introduce them into mainstream policy discourse. The metaphor of public health guideline implementation throws light on the problematical nature of the power possessed by medical practitioners in relation to public health systems in India. Even as practitioners wield 'negative' power in their ability to resist authority, they appear to lack the 'positive' power to contribute intellectually to the policy process. This mix of political obduracy and intellectual demoralization among practitioners also underpins a subtle trend in public health, of the separation of the world of ideas from the world of actions. Study findings highlight that stronger regulations and provisions for accountability in Indian health systems critically need to be balanced by measures to develop collective intellectual capital and include the voices of frontline practitioners in public health policy discourse.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20587601     DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czq023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Policy Plan        ISSN: 0268-1080            Impact factor:   3.344


  5 in total

1.  Rewards and challenges of providing HIV testing and counselling services: health worker perspectives from Burkina Faso, Kenya and Uganda.

Authors:  Sarah Bott; Melissa Neuman; Stephane Helleringer; Alice Desclaux; Khalil El Asmar; Carla Makhlouf Obermeyer
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2014-09-17       Impact factor: 3.344

2.  (Re)arranging "systems of care" in the early Ebola response in Sierra Leone: An interdisciplinary analysis.

Authors:  Susannah H Mayhew; Dina Balabanova; Ahmed Vandi; Gelejimah Alfred Mokuwa; Tommy Hanson; Melissa Parker; Paul Richards
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2021-07-06       Impact factor: 5.379

3.  Using workshops to develop theories of change in five low and middle income countries: lessons from the programme for improving mental health care (PRIME).

Authors:  Erica Breuer; Mary J De Silva; Abebaw Fekadu; Nagendra Prasad Luitel; Vaibhav Murhar; Juliet Nakku; Inge Petersen; Crick Lund
Journal:  Int J Ment Health Syst       Date:  2014-04-30

4.  The impact of delays on maternal and neonatal outcomes in Ugandan public health facilities: the role of absenteeism.

Authors:  Louise Ackers; Elena Ioannou; James Ackers-Johnson
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2016-05-03       Impact factor: 3.344

5.  The Practice of Power by Regional Managers in the Implementation of an Indigenous Peoples Health Policy in the Philippines.

Authors:  Ryan C Guinaran; Erlinda B Alupias; Lucy Gilson
Journal:  Int J Health Policy Manag       Date:  2021-07-01
  5 in total

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