Building a Systems Map: Applying Systems Thinking to Unhealthy Commodity Industry Influence on Public Health Policy.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES International Journal of Health Policy and Management Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-07 DOI:10.34172/ijhpm.2024.7872
Adam Bertscher, James Nobles, Anna B Gilmore, Krista Bondy, Amber van den Akker, Sarah Dance, Michael Bloomfield, Mateusz Zatoński
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Abstract

Background: Unhealthy commodity industries (UCIs) engage in political practices to influence public health policy, which poses barriers to protecting and promoting public health. Such influence exhibits characteristics of a complex system. Systems thinking would therefore appear to be a useful lens through which to study this phenomenon, potentially deepening our understanding of how UCI influence are interconnected with one another through their underlying political, economic and social structures. As such this study developed a qualitative systems map to depict the complex pathways through which UCIs influence public health policy and how they are interconnected with underlying structures.

Methods: Online participatory systems mapping workshops were conducted between November 2021 and February 2022. As a starting point for the workshops, a preliminary systems map was developed based on recent research. Twenty-three online workshops were conducted with 52 geographically diverse stakeholders representing academia, civil society (CS), public office, and global governance organisations (CGO). Analysis of workshop data in NVivo and feedback from participants resulted in a final systems map.

Results: The preliminary systems map consisted of 40 elements across six interdependent themes. The final systems map consisted of 64 elements across five interdependent themes, representing key pathways through which UCIs impact health policy-making: (1) direct access to public sector decision-makers; (2) creation of confusion and doubt about policy decisions; (3) corporate prioritisation of commercial profits and growth; (4) industry leveraging the legal and dispute settlement processes; and (5) industry leveraging policy-making, norms, rules, and processes.

Conclusion: UCI influence on public health policy is highly complex, involves interlinked practices, and is not reducible to a single point within the system. Instead, pathways to UCI influence emerge from the complex interactions between disparate national and global political, economic and social structures. These pathways provide numerous avenues for UCIs to influence public health policy, which poses challenges to formulating a singular intervention or limited set of interventions capable of effectively countering such influence. Using participatory methods, we made transparent the interconnections that could help identify interventions in future work.

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构建系统地图:将系统思维应用于不健康商品行业对公共卫生政策的影响。
背景:不健康商品行业(UCIs)通过政治手段影响公共卫生政策,这给保护和促进公众健康造成了障碍。这种影响表现出复杂系统的特征。因此,系统思维似乎是研究这一现象的一个有用视角,有可能加深我们对 UCI 影响如何通过其潜在的政治、经济和社会结构相互关联的理解。因此,本研究绘制了一张定性系统图,以描述城市社区倡议影响公共卫生政策的复杂途径,以及它们如何与潜在结构相互联系:方法:2021 年 11 月至 2022 年 2 月期间,开展了在线参与式系统图绘制研讨会。作为研讨会的起点,我们在近期研究的基础上绘制了初步的系统图。与代表学术界、公民社会(CS)、公职部门和全球治理组织(CGO)的 52 位不同地域的利益相关者开展了 23 次在线研讨会。在 NVivo 中对研讨会数据进行了分析,并根据参与者的反馈意见绘制了最终的系统地图:初步系统地图由 40 个要素组成,涉及六个相互依存的主题。最终的系统图包括 5 个相互依存主题中的 64 个元素,代表了 UCI 影响卫生政策制定的主要途径:(1)直接接触公共部门决策者;(2)制造对政策决定的混淆和怀疑;(3)企业优先考虑商业利润和增长;(4)行业利用法律和争端解决程序;以及(5)行业利用政策制定、规范、规则和程序:结论:UCI 对公共卫生政策的影响非常复杂,涉及相互关联的实践,不能简化为系统内的某一点。相反,在不同的国家和全球政治、经济和社会结构之间的复杂互动中,出现了影响城市社区倡议的途径。这些途径为非法移民提供了众多影响公共卫生政策的渠道,这对制定单一的干预措施或有限的干预措施来有效抵制这种影响构成了挑战。利用参与式方法,我们将有助于在未来工作中确定干预措施的相互联系透明化。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Health Policy and Management
International Journal of Health Policy and Management Health Professions-Health Information Management
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
14.30%
发文量
142
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Health Policy and Management (IJHPM) is a monthly open access, peer-reviewed journal which serves as an international and interdisciplinary setting for the dissemination of health policy and management research. It brings together individual specialties from different fields, notably health management/policy/economics, epidemiology, social/public policy, and philosophy into a dynamic academic mix.
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