Jassat Waasila, Moshabela Mosa, Schneider Helen
School of Public Health and SAMRC Health Services to Systems Research Unit, University of the Western Cape, Private Bag X17 Belville, Cape Town 7535, South Africa.
Health Practice, Genesis Analytics, 50 6th Road, Hyde Park, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa.
Health Policy Plan. 2025 Feb 6;40(2):183-193. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czae105.
South Africa has a high burden of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB). A policy to decentralize DR-TB treatment from specialized central hospitals to more accessible district facilities was introduced in 2011, but to date implementation has been suboptimal, with variable pace, coverage, and models of care emerging. This study explored multilevel policy implementation of DR-TB decentralization in two provinces of South Africa, Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal. Applying interpretive policy analysis, this paper describes how actors across health system levels and geographies made sense of the DR-TB policy and how this shaped implementation. In an embedded qualitative case study, districts of the two provinces were compared, through data collected in 94 in-depth interviews, and analysed using Vickers' framework of reality, value, and action judgements. Five district cases characterize variation in the pace of implementation and models of DR-TB care that emerged. Individual and collective attitudes for and against the policy were underpinned by different systems of meaning for interpreting policy problems and making decisions. These meaning systems were reflected in actor stances on whether DR-TB care needed to be specialized or generalized, nurse- or doctor-led, and institutionalized or ambulatory. Actors' stances influenced their actions and implementation strategies adopted. Resistance to decentralized DR-TB care related to perceived threats of budget cuts to and loss of authority of central facilities, and was often justified in fears of increased transmission, poor quality of care, and inadequate resources at lower levels. New advances in diagnosis and treatment to address the growing burden of DR-TB in South Africa will have little impact unless implementation dynamics are better understood, and attention paid to the mindsets, interests, and interpretations of policy by actors tasked with implementation. Deliberative policy implementation processes will enhance the quality of discourse, communication and cross-learning between policy actors, and critical for reaching synthesis of meaning systems.
南非耐多药结核病(DR-TB)负担沉重。2011年出台了一项将耐多药结核病治疗从专门的中心医院下放到更易就医的地区医疗机构的政策,但迄今为止,实施情况并不理想,出现了实施速度、覆盖范围和护理模式各异的情况。本研究探讨了南非西开普省和夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省两个省份耐多药结核病去中心化的多层次政策实施情况。运用解释性政策分析方法,本文描述了卫生系统各级和不同地区的行为主体如何理解耐多药结核病政策,以及这如何影响实施情况。在一个嵌入式定性案例研究中,通过对94次深入访谈收集的数据,对两个省份的地区进行了比较,并使用维克斯的现实、价值和行动判断框架进行分析。五个地区案例体现了耐多药结核病护理实施速度和模式的差异。支持和反对该政策的个人及集体态度,是由解释政策问题和做出决策的不同意义系统所支撑的。这些意义系统反映在行为主体对于耐多药结核病护理是需要专门化还是普遍化、由护士还是医生主导、以及是机构化还是门诊化的立场上。行为主体的立场影响了他们的行动和所采用的实施策略。对耐多药结核病去中心化护理的抵制与认为中央机构预算削减和权力丧失的威胁有关,并且往往以担心传播增加、护理质量差以及较低层级资源不足为理由。除非更好地理解实施动态,并关注负责实施的行为主体的思维模式、利益和对政策的解读,否则应对南非日益加重的耐多药结核病负担的诊断和治疗新进展将收效甚微。协商性政策实施过程将提高政策行为主体之间话语、沟通和交叉学习的质量,对于达成意义系统的综合至关重要。