School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, Health Sciences Faculty, Anzio Road, Observatory, 7925, South Africa.
Health Policy Plan. 2012 Mar;27 Suppl 1:i64-76. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czs007.
Stakeholder analysis is widely recommended as a tool for gathering insights on policy actor interests in, positions on, and power to influence, health policy issues. Such information is recognized to be critical in developing viable health policy proposals, and is particularly important for new health care financing proposals that aim to secure universal coverage (UC). However, there remain surprisingly few published accounts of the use of stakeholder analysis in health policy development generally, and health financing specifically, and even fewer that draw lessons from experience about how to do and how to use such analysis. This paper, therefore, aims to support those developing or researching UC reforms to think both about how to conduct stakeholder analysis, and how to use it to support evidence-informed pro-poor health policy development. It presents practical lessons and ideas drawn from experience of doing stakeholder analysis around UC reforms in South Africa and Tanzania, combined with insights from other relevant material. The paper has two parts. The first presents lessons of experience for conducting a stakeholder analysis, and the second, ideas about how to use the analysis to support policy design and the development of actor and broader political management strategies. Comparison of experience across South Africa and Tanzania shows that there are some commonalities concerning which stakeholders have general interests in UC reform. However, differences in context and in reform proposals generate differences in the particular interests of stakeholders and their likely positioning on reform proposals, as well as in their relative balance of power. It is, therefore, difficult to draw cross-national policy comparisons around these specific issues. Nonetheless, the paper shows that cross-national policy learning is possible around the approach to analysis, the factors influencing judgements and the implications for, and possible approaches to, management of policy processes. Such learning does not entail generalization about which UC reform package offers most gain in any setting, but rather about how to manage the reform process within a particular context.
利益相关者分析被广泛推荐为一种工具,用于收集政策参与者对卫生政策问题的利益、立场和影响力的见解。人们认识到,这些信息对于制定可行的卫生政策建议至关重要,对于旨在确保全民覆盖(UC)的新医疗保健融资建议尤其重要。然而,一般来说,在卫生政策制定中,特别是在卫生融资方面,很少有关于使用利益相关者分析的出版物,而且很少有从经验中吸取教训的出版物,说明如何进行和使用这种分析。因此,本文旨在为那些正在制定或研究全民覆盖改革的人提供支持,既要考虑如何进行利益相关者分析,又要考虑如何利用这种分析来支持基于证据的有利于穷人的卫生政策制定。本文从南非和坦桑尼亚全民覆盖改革背景下进行利益相关者分析的经验中汲取了实际经验和想法,并结合了其他相关材料的见解。本文有两个部分。第一部分介绍了进行利益相关者分析的经验教训,第二部分介绍了如何利用分析来支持政策设计和制定行动者以及更广泛的政治管理战略的想法。南非和坦桑尼亚的经验比较表明,在全民覆盖改革方面,有一些共同的利益相关者。然而,背景和改革建议的差异导致了利益相关者的具体利益以及他们对改革建议的可能立场,以及他们相对权力的平衡存在差异。因此,很难就这些具体问题进行跨国政策比较。尽管如此,本文表明,围绕分析方法、影响判断的因素以及对政策过程的管理的影响和可能方法,可以进行跨国政策学习。这种学习并不意味着在任何情况下都可以推广哪种全民覆盖改革方案能带来最大收益,而是意味着如何在特定背景下管理改革过程。