照亮当地:非正规机构能否成为巴布亚新几内亚卫生系统发展的补充?

Andrew McNee
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The paper draws on an emerging body of development thinking that recognizes that development depends on institutions that are stable, fair, legitimate and flexible enough to reflect political pressures; and that in turn, these kinds of institutions are the product of the interplay of formal and informal institutions. In particular, this theory argues it is when informal institutions are 'complementary' to formal institutions that institutions are likely to be most effective. In these situations informal institutions support the formal institution through 'filling in gaps' either by addressing contingencies not dealt with in the formal rules and/or by facilitating or creating incentives for individuals to pursue the goals of formal institutions. The paper analyses the PNG health system through the lens of this non-formal institutional framework. This analysis, based on secondary data, suggests: Historically, the formal PNG health system was introduced as part of the broader process of colonial administration which, in combination with a number of contemporary ideological forces, allowed little or no space for indigenous negotiation, contestation, or engagement on the form of the PNG health system, or the nature of care within that system. This legacy of top-down planning and delivery in the formal health services of PNG continues, in a modified form, to the present. There is a rich, vibrant matrix of local, intersecting non-formal institutions of relevance to health in PNG – non-formal institutions that are characterized by strong and deep engagement and contestation around health and illness issues. The formal health system is not optimally leveraging the motivation, energy and legitimacy inherent in these non-formal institutions. Some elements of the non-formal institutions in PNG that, prima facie would appear to be potentially complementary to health service development include: Local leadership keen to capitalize on the perceived 'modernizing' political benefits of western health services; communities seeking to locate health workers, and health facilities more broadly, within local social relationships – relationships that coincide with understood social obligations; space for local negotiation around appropriate level/form of user fees – with a considerable degree of intra-family subsidization, group based risk sharing, and exemptions for the poor a high degree of patient autonomy – with health seeking behavior influenced by a social understanding of the cause and appropriate treatment of illness; a very strong tendency to locate ill-health in ruptured social relations - which require a range of collective actions to remedy; the potential for the associational value of provider associations to provide a source of constraint on health worker behavior that is not evident from government; a vibrant (if diverse) range of traditional health systems that remain common and valued healing resorts for many Papua New Guineans, and which have shown a relative degree of openness to western healing; a rich tapestry of community and clan based organizations that are actively engaged in solving local collective action problems, including health improvement activities. The paper argues there is no blueprint for how an awareness of non-formal institutions could be incorporated into possible institutional re-design/reform of the PNG health system. However it does conclude with a number of general pointers to guide possible action. These include: The critical importance of looking beyond the facade of the formal organizational and institutional arrangements of the health sector to make visible the non-formal institutions that surround and shape the formal. The need for deeper and more meaningful structures of engagement/ involvement of the PNG populace in the form, financing, delivery and performance of the PNG health system. The need to understand better the scale, motivation and practices of local, village based private health resources. The opportunity to build more dispersed mechanisms of sector regulation – including community monitoring of services, and competition between providers based on reputation and accreditation. A more concentrated focus on how traditional and formal health services can co-exist and, over time, integrate to create new or 'hybrid' institutions. A possible larger role for provider associations as organizational actors in the planning, development, management and regulation of PNG health services than is currently the case.","PeriodicalId":210610,"journal":{"name":"Public Sector Strategy & Organizational Behavior eJournal","volume":"47 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2012-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Illuminating the Local: Can Non-Formal Institutions be Complementary to Health System Development in Papua New Guinea?\",\"authors\":\"Andrew McNee\",\"doi\":\"10.2139/ssrn.2041831\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This paper offers a fresh insight into the performance and reform opportunities of the formal health system of Papua New Guinea. 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引用次数: 3

摘要

本文为巴布亚新几内亚正规卫生系统的绩效和改革机会提供了新的见解。本文的一个中心观点是,巴布亚新几内亚正式卫生系统的历史强加和持续自上而下的性质,并没有充分利用构成巴布亚新几内亚卫生系统的广泛非正式机构固有的潜在积极激励和动机。本文建议,加强对这些非正式制度的理解,可以为如何重新配置正式制度以更好地与非正式制度保持一致提供线索。这种方法提供的机会是利用非正规机构固有的能量、动机和合法性,更好地支持或注入正规卫生系统。该文件借鉴了一种新兴的发展思想,这种思想认识到发展取决于稳定、公平、合法和足够灵活以反映政治压力的机构;反过来,这些制度是正式制度和非正式制度相互作用的产物。特别是,该理论认为,当非正式制度与正式制度“互补”时,制度可能是最有效的。在这些情况下,非正式制度通过“填补空白”来支持正式制度,这些空白是通过解决正式规则中未处理的突发事件和/或通过促进或创造激励个人追求正式制度的目标来实现的。本文从这一非正式制度框架的角度分析了巴布亚新几内亚的卫生系统。这一基于二手数据的分析表明:从历史上看,正式的巴布亚新几内亚卫生系统是作为更广泛的殖民管理过程的一部分引入的,这一过程与许多当代意识形态力量相结合,很少或根本没有给土著就巴布亚新几内亚卫生系统的形式或该系统内的护理性质进行谈判、争论或参与的空间。这种自上而下的规划和提供巴布亚新几内亚正规保健服务的传统,以一种改进的形式延续至今。在巴布亚新几内亚,与卫生相关的地方、相互交叉的非正式机构构成了一个丰富而充满活力的矩阵,这些非正式机构的特点是围绕卫生和疾病问题进行强有力和深入的参与和辩论。正规卫生系统没有充分利用这些非正规机构固有的动机、精力和合法性。巴布亚新几内亚非正规机构的一些因素,从表面上看,似乎对保健服务的发展具有潜在的补充作用,包括:地方领导热衷于利用西方保健服务的“现代化”政治利益;寻求将卫生工作者和卫生设施更广泛地安置在当地社会关系中——这种关系与人们所理解的社会义务相一致;就适当的用户收费水平/形式进行地方谈判的空间——包括相当程度的家庭内部补贴、以群体为基础的风险分担和对穷人的豁免,以及病人的高度自主权——寻求保健的行为受到社会对病因和适当治疗的理解的影响;将不健康归咎于破裂的社会关系的强烈倾向——这需要采取一系列集体行动加以补救;提供者协会的关联价值可能会对卫生工作者的行为构成约束,而政府对此并不明显;一个充满活力(如果多样化的话)的传统卫生系统,对许多巴布亚新几内亚人来说仍然是常见的和有价值的治疗胜地,并且对西方治疗显示出相对程度的开放;丰富的社区和部族组织,积极参与解决地方集体行动问题,包括改善健康的活动。该论文认为,没有蓝图说明如何将对非正规机构的认识纳入巴布亚新几内亚卫生系统可能的制度重新设计/改革中。然而,它确实总结了一些指导可能采取行动的一般性指针。其中包括:至关重要的是,要透过卫生部门的正式组织和体制安排的表象,让人们看到围绕和塑造正式机构的非正式机构。需要建立更深入和更有意义的结构,使巴布亚新几内亚民众参与巴布亚新几内亚卫生系统的形式、融资、交付和绩效。需要更好地了解以地方和乡村为基础的私人卫生资源的规模、动机和做法。建立更分散的部门监管机制的机会——包括社区对服务的监测,以及供应商之间基于声誉和认证的竞争。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Illuminating the Local: Can Non-Formal Institutions be Complementary to Health System Development in Papua New Guinea?
This paper offers a fresh insight into the performance and reform opportunities of the formal health system of Papua New Guinea. A central tenant of this paper is that the historically imposed and continuing top-down nature of the formal health system in PNG is not capitalizing on potentially positive incentives and motivations inherent in the broad range of non-formal institutions that frame the PNG health system. The paper suggests that an enhanced understanding of these non-formal institutions may provide clues for how the formal system could be reconfigured to better align with the non-formal. The opportunity offered by this approach is to leverage the energy, motivation and legitimacy inherent in non-formal institutions to better buttress or infuse the formal health system. The paper draws on an emerging body of development thinking that recognizes that development depends on institutions that are stable, fair, legitimate and flexible enough to reflect political pressures; and that in turn, these kinds of institutions are the product of the interplay of formal and informal institutions. In particular, this theory argues it is when informal institutions are 'complementary' to formal institutions that institutions are likely to be most effective. In these situations informal institutions support the formal institution through 'filling in gaps' either by addressing contingencies not dealt with in the formal rules and/or by facilitating or creating incentives for individuals to pursue the goals of formal institutions. The paper analyses the PNG health system through the lens of this non-formal institutional framework. This analysis, based on secondary data, suggests: Historically, the formal PNG health system was introduced as part of the broader process of colonial administration which, in combination with a number of contemporary ideological forces, allowed little or no space for indigenous negotiation, contestation, or engagement on the form of the PNG health system, or the nature of care within that system. This legacy of top-down planning and delivery in the formal health services of PNG continues, in a modified form, to the present. There is a rich, vibrant matrix of local, intersecting non-formal institutions of relevance to health in PNG – non-formal institutions that are characterized by strong and deep engagement and contestation around health and illness issues. The formal health system is not optimally leveraging the motivation, energy and legitimacy inherent in these non-formal institutions. Some elements of the non-formal institutions in PNG that, prima facie would appear to be potentially complementary to health service development include: Local leadership keen to capitalize on the perceived 'modernizing' political benefits of western health services; communities seeking to locate health workers, and health facilities more broadly, within local social relationships – relationships that coincide with understood social obligations; space for local negotiation around appropriate level/form of user fees – with a considerable degree of intra-family subsidization, group based risk sharing, and exemptions for the poor a high degree of patient autonomy – with health seeking behavior influenced by a social understanding of the cause and appropriate treatment of illness; a very strong tendency to locate ill-health in ruptured social relations - which require a range of collective actions to remedy; the potential for the associational value of provider associations to provide a source of constraint on health worker behavior that is not evident from government; a vibrant (if diverse) range of traditional health systems that remain common and valued healing resorts for many Papua New Guineans, and which have shown a relative degree of openness to western healing; a rich tapestry of community and clan based organizations that are actively engaged in solving local collective action problems, including health improvement activities. The paper argues there is no blueprint for how an awareness of non-formal institutions could be incorporated into possible institutional re-design/reform of the PNG health system. However it does conclude with a number of general pointers to guide possible action. These include: The critical importance of looking beyond the facade of the formal organizational and institutional arrangements of the health sector to make visible the non-formal institutions that surround and shape the formal. The need for deeper and more meaningful structures of engagement/ involvement of the PNG populace in the form, financing, delivery and performance of the PNG health system. The need to understand better the scale, motivation and practices of local, village based private health resources. The opportunity to build more dispersed mechanisms of sector regulation – including community monitoring of services, and competition between providers based on reputation and accreditation. A more concentrated focus on how traditional and formal health services can co-exist and, over time, integrate to create new or 'hybrid' institutions. A possible larger role for provider associations as organizational actors in the planning, development, management and regulation of PNG health services than is currently the case.
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