the politics and analytics of health policy

Authors

calum r. paton

abstract

let us start with an example of health policy analysis in action. within that category of countries loosely known as ‘the west’, quite basic differences exist in attitudes to health policy and also actual health policy. comparing the us with mainland europe and indeed canada, for example, one perceives a difference in attitude on the part of the majority towards collectivism and individualism in access to, provision of and financing of healthcare. the explanation for policy and system differences—for example, between the us healthcare system(s) and the various nhss of the uk countries (england, scotland, wales and northern ireland)—is commonly framed in terms of ‘ideology’ but there are also ‘institutional’ explanations (1). additionally, however, popular attitudes or ‘values’ may be taken as autonomous ‘inputs’ into the explanation (e.g. ‘american values prevent the enactment of an nhs’) or, at least in part, derived from or influenced by institutional reality. if, for example, there is no chance of a bill to establish an nhs or a comprehensive system of public health insurance passing in washington, then reformers over time trim not only their legislative ambitions, but also their very way of thinking about the issue.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

The Politics and Analytics of Health Policy

Let us start with an example of health policy analysis in action. Within that category of countries loosely known as ‘the West’, quite basic differences exist in attitudes to health policy and also actual health policy. Comparing the US with mainland Europe and indeed Canada, for example, one perceives a difference in attitude on the part of the majority towards collectivism and individualism i...

full text

Sharpening the Health Policy Analytical Rapier; Comment on “The Politics and Analytics of Health Policy”

This commentary on the Editorial ‘The politics and analytics of health policy’ by Professor Calum Paton focuses on two issues. First, it points to the unclear links between ideas, ideology, values, and discourse and policy, and warns that discourse is often a poor guide to enacted policy. Second, it suggests that realism, particularly ‘programme theory’ are useful tools for health policy analys...

full text

The politics and analytics of health policy.

Introduction Let us start with an example of health policy analysis in action. Within that category of countries loosely known as ‘the West’, quite basic differences exist in attitudes to health policy and also actual health policy. Comparing the US with mainland Europe and indeed Canada, for example, one perceives a difference in attitude on the part of the majority towards collectivism and in...

full text

sharpening the health policy analytical rapier; comment on “the politics and analytics of health policy”

this commentary on the editorial ‘the politics and analytics of health policy’ by professor calum paton focuses on two issues. first, it points to the unclear links between ideas, ideology, values, and discourse and policy, and warns that discourse is often a poor guide to enacted policy. second, it suggests that realism, particularly ‘programme theory’ are useful tools for health policy analys...

full text

The Paradox of Health Policy: Revealing the True Colours of This ‘Chameleon Concept’; Comment on “The Politics and Analytics of Health Policy”

Health policy has been termed a ‘chameleon concept’, referring to its ability to take on different forms of disciplinarity as well as different roles and functions. This paper extends Paton’s analysis by exploring the paradox of health policy as a field of academic inquiry—sitting across many of the boundaries of social science but also marginalised by them. It situates contemporary approaches ...

full text

the paradox of health policy: revealing the true colours of this ‘chameleon concept’; comment on “the politics and analytics of health policy”

health policy has been termed a ‘chameleon concept’, referring to its ability to take on different forms of disciplinarity as well as different roles and functions. this paper extends paton’s analysis by exploring the paradox of health policy as a field of academic inquiry—sitting across many of the boundaries of social science but also marginalised by them. it situates contemporary approaches ...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
international journal of health policy and management

Publisher: kerman university of medical sciences

ISSN

volume 2

issue 3 2014

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023