Literature DB >> 33227121

Framing universal health coverage in Kenya: an interpretive analysis of the 2004 Bill on National Social Health Insurance.

Adam D Koon1,2, Benjamin Hawkins2, Susannah H Mayhew2.   

Abstract

In 2004, President Mwai Kibaki of Kenya refused to sign a popular Bill on National Social Health Insurance into law. Drawing on innovations in framing theory, this research provides a social explanation for this decision. In addition to document review, this study involved interpretive analysis of transcripts from 50 semi-structured interviews with leading actors involved in the health financing policy process in Kenya, 2014-15. The frame-critical analysis focused on how actors engaged in (1) sensemaking, (2) naming, which includes selecting and categorizing and (3) storytelling. We demonstrated that actors' abilities to make sense of the Bill were largely influenced by their own understandings of the finer features of the Bill and the array of interest groups privy to the debate. This was reinforced by a process of naming, which selects and categorizes aspects of the Bill, including the public persona of its primary sponsor, its affordability, sustainability, technical dimensions and linkages to notions of economic liberalism. Actors used these understandings and names to tell stories of ideational warfare, which involved narrative accounts of policy resistance and betrayal. This analysis illustrates the difficulty in enacting sweeping reform measures and thus provides a basis for understanding incrementalism in Kenyan health policy.
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Keywords:  Health policy; Kenya; framing; policy analysis; universal health coverage

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33227121     DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czaa133

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


  1 in total

1.  Pharmacy premises licensing policy formulation: experience from Ghana.

Authors:  Augustina Koduah; Reginald Sekyi-Brown; Joseph Kodjo Nsiah Nyoagbe; Daniel Amaning Danquah; Irene Kretchy
Journal:  Health Res Policy Syst       Date:  2021-02-08
  1 in total

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