TY - JOUR
T1 - Public health from the middle-out
T2 - A new analytical perspective
AU - Kranzler, Yannai
AU - Parag, Yael
AU - Davidovitch, Nadav
N1 - Funding Information: Funding: This study was supported by the Israel Science Foundation (ISF grant no. 184542). Funding Information: An additional example: MOCS expanded support for physical activity, through the Sports-for-All Department manager’s position on funding boards and committees, like the Union for School Sports and the National Sports Betting Association. These committees had broadly defined mandates, but board members were given jurisdiction over funding details, creating criteria like raising the number of children participating in physical activity or increasing girls’ representation in sports to funding schemes. In this way, MOCS steered 80 million NIS to women’s sports and added supplemental physical activity in schools for children not in extra-curricular sports programming. Publisher Copyright: © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2019/12/2
Y1 - 2019/12/2
N2 - Obstacles to collaborative public health frameworks such as Health in All Policies continue to emerge. Partnership-based public health programs present opportunities to study how public servants and practitioners address these barriers in real time. To this end, we utilized “Middle-Out,” a socio-technical analytical approach that highlights the importance of Middle Actors-stakeholders positioned between policymakers and grassroots—to policy diffusion, innovation and collaboration in public health. We conducted participatory observation in administrative settings of Israel’s National Program to Promote Active, Healthy Lifestyle, 30 stakeholder interviews and document analysis. We examined two dimensions of impact from the Middle-Out: Directions of Influence—Middle-Up, Middle-Down and Sideways, and Modes of Influence—Enabling, Mediating and Aggregating. Through Middle-Out’s lens, our analysis transcends visible benchmarks such as legislation and macro-level resource-allocation, focusing, instead, on elusive administrative spaces within which Middle Actors shape policies, steer funding and facilitate continuity. Incorporating Middle-Out into public health’s conceptual toolbox, we conclude, can improve understanding of complex public health policy arenas, increase recognition of critical socio-technical changemakers and catalyze more effective design of policy tools and strategies that specifically harness Middle Actors’ strengths and qualities.
AB - Obstacles to collaborative public health frameworks such as Health in All Policies continue to emerge. Partnership-based public health programs present opportunities to study how public servants and practitioners address these barriers in real time. To this end, we utilized “Middle-Out,” a socio-technical analytical approach that highlights the importance of Middle Actors-stakeholders positioned between policymakers and grassroots—to policy diffusion, innovation and collaboration in public health. We conducted participatory observation in administrative settings of Israel’s National Program to Promote Active, Healthy Lifestyle, 30 stakeholder interviews and document analysis. We examined two dimensions of impact from the Middle-Out: Directions of Influence—Middle-Up, Middle-Down and Sideways, and Modes of Influence—Enabling, Mediating and Aggregating. Through Middle-Out’s lens, our analysis transcends visible benchmarks such as legislation and macro-level resource-allocation, focusing, instead, on elusive administrative spaces within which Middle Actors shape policies, steer funding and facilitate continuity. Incorporating Middle-Out into public health’s conceptual toolbox, we conclude, can improve understanding of complex public health policy arenas, increase recognition of critical socio-technical changemakers and catalyze more effective design of policy tools and strategies that specifically harness Middle Actors’ strengths and qualities.
KW - Collaboration
KW - Health in all policies
KW - Middle actors
KW - Middle-out
KW - Obesity
KW - Public health
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85076276314&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16244993
DO - https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16244993
M3 - Article
SN - 1661-7827
VL - 16
JO - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
JF - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
IS - 24
M1 - 4993
ER -