Government of Saskatchewan, Ministry of Energy and Resources1000, 2103 11th Avenue Regina SK S4P 3Z8, Canada.
Department of Political Science, McGill University, Room 414, Leacock Building, 855 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2T7, Canada.
Health Policy Plan. 2020 Nov 20;35(9):1150-1158. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czaa080.
Contributing to the ongoing debate about policy feedback in comparative public policy research, this article examines the evolution of healthcare financing policy in Ghana. More specifically, this article investigates the shift in healthcare financing from full cost recovery, known as 'cash-and-carry', to a nation-wide public health insurance policy called the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS). It argues that unintended, self-undermining feedback effects from the existing health policy constrained the menu of options available to reformers, while simultaneously opening a window of opportunity for transformative policy change. The study advances the current public policy scholarship by showing how the interaction between policy feedbacks and other factors-particularly ideas and electoral pressures-can bring about path-departing policy change. Given the dearth of scholarship on self-undermining policy feedback effects in the Global South, this contribution's originality lies in its application of the novel theory to the sub-Saharan African context.
本文探讨了加纳医疗融资政策的演变,为比较公共政策研究中关于政策反馈的持续争论做出了贡献。更具体地说,本文研究了医疗融资从全额成本回收(即“现金和携带”)向全国性公共健康保险计划(国家健康保险计划,NHIS)的转变。文章认为,现有卫生政策产生的意料之外、自我破坏的反馈效应限制了改革者的可选方案,同时为变革性政策变革打开了机会之窗。本研究通过展示政策反馈与其他因素(特别是思想和选举压力)之间的相互作用如何导致偏离原有路径的政策变革,推进了当前的公共政策学术研究。鉴于南方国家在自我破坏的政策反馈效应方面的学术研究匮乏,本研究的新颖之处在于将这一新颖理论应用于撒哈拉以南非洲的背景下。