| Literature DB >> 35817497 |
Rene Loewenson1, Sue Godt2, Pascalina Chanda-Kapata3.
Abstract
The actors influencing the commercial determinants of health (CDOH) in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) have different interests and lenses around the costs and benefits of market influences in health. We analysed the views and priorities on CDOH in the discourse of global and regional agencies, SSA governments, private investors and companies, civil society and academia through a desk review of online publications post-2010, validated by purposively selected key informant interviews.The most polarised views were between civil society and academia on one hand, focused more on harms, and private business/investors on the other, almost exclusively focused on benefits. Others had mixed messaging, encouraging partnerships with commercial actors for health benefits and also voicing cautions over negative health impacts. Views also differed between transnational and domestic business and investors.Three areas of discourse stood out, demonstrating also tensions between commercial and public health objectives. These were the role of human rights as fundamental for or obstacle to engaging commercial practice in health; the development paradigm and role of a neoliberal political economy generating harms or opportunities for health; and the implications of commercial activity in health services. COVID-19 has amplified debate, generating demand for public sectors to incentivise commercial activity to 'modernise' and digitise health services and meet funding gaps and generating new thinking and engagement on domestic production of key health inputs.Power plays a critical role in CDOH. Commercial actors in SSA increase their influence through discursive and agential forms of power and take advantage of the structural power gained from a dominant view of free markets and for-profit commerce as essential for well-being. As a counterfactual, we found and present options for using these same three forms of narrative, agential and structural power to proactively advance public health objectives and leadership on CDOH in SSA. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: Health policy; Public Health; Review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35817497 PMCID: PMC9274517 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009271
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Papers sourced by actor, from searches, as assigned after text review, included in this paper, and key informants by actor
| Actor | # of papers | Cited in this paper | Key informant (KI) by category* | |
| From searches | In category | |||
| International/ global actors† operating in SSA | 88 | 51 | 10 | KI6 International technical expert with experience in SSA. |
| SSA continental and regional organisations‡ | 21 | 54 | 14 | KI1 Subregional intergovernmental agency lead. |
| SSA governments | 25 | 14 | 7 | KI8 National governmental health actor. |
| Banks, investors, funders, operating/investing in SSA | 48 | 29 | 10 | KI9 Continental finance actor. |
| Corporate, private for profit and business associations | 43 | 21 | 5 | |
| Civil society/social | 27 | 42 | 14 | KI2 Subregional trade union lead. |
| Academia/technical | 48 | 89 | 30 | KI3 Continental ecology technical agency. |
| Total | 300 | 300 | 90§ | |
*KI number shown and used in references.
†Multilateral, bilateral, south–south, philanthropic and commercial.
‡Continental refers to Africa-wide and African Union organisations; regional organisations refer to intergovernmental and other agencies within or combining parts of east, west, central and or/southern Africa.
§Note: this excludes the four methods papers cited in this paper.
SSA, sub-Saharan Africa.
Summary of findings on key areas of discourse and priorities by actor
| Actor | Framings and priorities in the actor’s ‘voice’/discourse as found in cited sources |
| International/global actors involved in SSA | Establish |
| SSA continental and regional organisations | African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights includes protections against negative impacts of private sector expansion that ‘negatively impact the enjoyment of the |
| SSA governments | National government strategies highlight CDOH risks linked to food quality and safety, unhealthy diets, alcohol and substance abuse, tobacco use, monocropping displacing food production, urbanisation and extractives. Concern over and rising levels of NCDs, |
| Banks and investors operating in SSA | Most investors focus on opportunities for and returns from commercial investment in |
| Private-for-profit business in SSA | No direct corporate voice identified negative health consequences from products or processes. Many perceived SSA |
| Civil society in SSA | Civil society identifies harmful commercial commodities (eg, ultra-processed food, alcohol and tobacco) and processes (eg, extractive industries, genetic modification of foods, monocropping and agribusiness). Extractive activities, global volatility, lack of recognition of indigenous law and knowledge, corrupt power relations, conflict, declining aid, tax waivers, illicit financial flows and resources diverted from locally appropriate solutions contribute to CDOH. Rather than supporting UHC |
| Academia | CDOH and their impacts are noted to be poorly monitored, especially in marginalised communities, and ‘normalised’ by cultures and marketing. Risks include urban transport, air pollution, occupational hazards, tobacco, alcohol, ultra-processed and fast food, gambling, aggravating NCDs and poverty, with CDOH intensified under hyperurbanisation, rapid economic growth, increased disposable income and associated with TNC-influenced trade, investment and products that may sideline local producers. In conflicts between for-profit interests and public health goals, governments are said to often align with commercial interests. In the SDGs, ‘attempting to achieve one may result in another being negatively affected’. |
Sources: as cited and authors from ref 18.
AfCFTA, African Continental Free Trade agreement; NCDs, non-communicable diseases; SSA, sub-Saharan Africa; TNCs, transnational corporations; UHC, universal health coverage.