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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Whyle, Eleanor"

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    A mixed method media analysis of the representation of the South African National Health Insurance Policy in the mainstream media from 2011 to 2019
    (2021) Bust, Lynn Hazel; Olivier, Jill; Whyle, Eleanor
    Media is a crucial factor in shaping public opinion and setting policy agendas. There is limited research on the role of media in health policy processes in low- and middle-income countries. This study profiles South Africa as a case example, currently in the process of implementing a major health policy reform, National Health Insurance (NHI). A descriptive, mixed methods study was conducted in five phases. Evidence was gathered through a scoping review of secondary literature; discourse analysis of global policy documents on universal health coverage and South African NHI policy documents; and a content and discourse analysis of South African print and online media texts focused on NHI. Representations in the media were analysed and dominant discourses that might influence the policy process were identified. Dominant discourses in SA media were identified relating to ‘health as a global public good', biopolitics, and corruption. Media representations focused on political contestation and the impact of NHI on elite actors. Representations in the media did not acknowledge the lived reality of most of the South African population. The discourses identified might influence the policy process by reinforcing socially dominant discourses and power structures, and hindering public participation. This might reinforce current inequalities in the health system, with negative repercussions for access to health care. This study highlights the need to understand mainstream media as part of a people centred health system, particularly in the context of universal health coverage reforms such as NHI. This would require the formation of collaborative and sustainable networks of policy actors, including actors within media, to develop strategies to counter-act harmful representations in the media that might reinforce inequalities and prevent successful implementation of NHI. Strategies should also investigate how to leverage media within health policy processes to decrease inequalities and increase access to health care. Research should be undertaken to explore media in other diverse formats and languages, and in other contexts, particularly low- and middle-income countries, to further understand media's role in health policy processes.
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    Social values and health systems in health policy and systems research: a mixed-method systematic review and evidence map
    (2020) Whyle, Eleanor; Olivier, Jill
    Because health systems are conceptualized as social systems, embedded in social contexts and shaped by human agency, values are a key factor in health system change. As such, health systems software—including values, norms, ideas and relationships—is considered a foundational focus of the field of health policy and systems research (HPSR). A substantive evidence-base exploring the influence of software factors on system functioning has developed but remains fragmented, with a lack of conceptual clarity and theoretical coherence. This is especially true for work on ‘social values’ within health systems—for which there is currently no substantive review available. This study reports on a systematic mixed-methods evidence mapping review on social values within HPSR. The study reaffirms the centrality of social values within HPSR and highlights significant evidence gaps. Research on social values in low- and middle-income country contexts is exceedingly rare (and mostly produced by authors in high-income countries), particularly within the limited body of empirical studies on the subject. In addition, few HPS researchers are drawing on available social science methodologies that would enable more in-depth empirical work on social values. This combination (over-representation of high-income country perspectives and little empirical work) suggests that the field of HPSR is at risk of developing theoretical foundations that are not supported by empirical evidence nor broadly generalizable. Strategies for future work on social values in HPSR are suggested, including: countering pervasive ideas about research hierarchies that prize positivist paradigms and systems hardware-focused studies as more rigorous and relevant to policy-makers; utilizing available social science theories and methodologies; conceptual development to build common framings of key concepts to guide future research, founded on quality empirical research from diverse contexts; and using empirical evidence to inform the development of operationalizable frameworks that will support rigorous future research on social values in health systems.
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    Unravelling unintended consequences in health policy through the analysis of the 2007 occupation-specific dispensation strategy: a qualitative systematic review
    (2025) Witten, Dane; Whyle, Eleanor
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