Inhibitors and Supporters of Policy Change in the Regulation of Unhealthy Food Marketing in Australia.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Yandisa Ngqangashe, Sirinya Phulkerd, Ashley Schram, Jeff Collin, Carmen Huckel Schneider, Anne Marie Thow, Sharon Friel
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Evidence on the impact of policies that regulate unhealthy food marketing demonstrates a need for a shift from pure industry self-regulation toward statutory regulation. Institutional rules, decision-making procedures, actor practices, and institutional norms influence the regulatory choices made by policy-makers. This study examined institutional processes that sustain, support, or inhibit change in the food marketing regulation in Australia using the three pillars of institutions framework - regulatory, normative, and cultural cognitive pillars.

Methods: This was a qualitative study. Twenty-four in-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with industry, government, civil society, and academic actors who are involved in nutrition policy in Australia.

Results: The regulatory pillar was perceived to inhibit policy change through the co-regulation and self-regulation frameworks that assign rulemaking, monitoring and enforcement to industry bodies with minimal oversight by regulatory agencies and no involvement of health actors. The normative pillar was perceived to provide pathways for comprehensive statutory regulation through institutional goals and norms for collaboration that centre on a whole-of-government approach. The framing of food marketing policies to highlight the vulnerability of children is a cultural cognitive element that was perceived to be essential for getting support for policy change; however, there was a lack of shared understanding of food marketing as a policy issue. In addition, government ideologies that are perceived to be reluctant to regulate commercial actors and values that prioritize economic interest over public health make it difficult for health advocates to argue for statutory regulation of food marketing.

Conclusion: Elements of all three pillars (regulatory, normative, and cultural-cognitive) were identified as either inhibitors or pathways that support policy change. This study contributes to the understanding of factors that inhibit policy change and potential pathways for implementing comprehensive statutory regulation of unhealthy food marketing.

澳大利亚不健康食品营销监管政策变革的抑制者和支持者。
背景:有关不健康食品营销监管政策影响的证据表明,有必要从纯粹的行业自律转向法定监管。制度规则、决策程序、行为者惯例和制度规范影响着政策制定者的监管选择。本研究利用制度框架的三大支柱--监管支柱、规范支柱和文化认知支柱,研究了澳大利亚食品营销监管中维持、支持或抑制变革的制度过程:这是一项定性研究。对参与澳大利亚营养政策制定的行业、政府、民间团体和学术界人士进行了 24 次半结构式深度访谈:结果:人们认为,监管支柱通过共同监管和自我监管框架抑制了政策变革,这些框架将规则制定、监测和执行工作分配给了行业机构,监管机构的监督力度极小,卫生部门也没有参与其中。规范性支柱被认为通过以整个政府方法为中心的机构目标和合作规范,为全面的法定监管提供了途径。食品营销政策的制定要强调儿童的脆弱性,这是一个文化认知因素,被认为对获得政策变革的支持至关重要;但是,对食品营销作为一个政策问题缺乏共同的理解。此外,政府不愿监管商业行为者的意识形态,以及经济利益优先于公共健康的价值观,使得健康倡导者很难主张对食品营销进行法定监管:结论:所有三大支柱(监管、规范和文化认知)的要素都被认为是抑制因素或支持政策变革的途径。这项研究有助于人们了解抑制政策变革的因素,以及对不健康食品营销实施全面法定监管的潜在途径。
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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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