TY - JOUR
T1 - Testing the contextual Interaction theory in a UHC pilot district in South Africa
AU - Michel, Janet
AU - Mohlakoana, Nthabiseng
AU - Bärnighausen, Till
AU - Tediosi, Fabrizio
AU - Evans, David
AU - McIntyre, Di
AU - Bressers, Hans T.A.
AU - Tanner, Marcel
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded through the European Commission`s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7-CP-FP-SICA, grant agreement number 261349). The funding period and project ended in 2016. The funder has no influence on the research performed, the content of the manuscript or decision to publish.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Background: World-wide, there is growing universal health coverage (UHC) enthusiasm. The South African government began piloting policies aimed at achieving UHC in 2012. These UHC policies have been and are being rolled out in the ten selected pilot districts. Our study explored policy implementation experiences of 71 actors involved in UHC policy implementation, in one South African pilot district using the Contextual Interaction Theory (CIT) lens. Method: Our study applied a two-actor deductive theory of implementation, Contextual Interaction Theory (CIT) to analyse 71 key informant interviews from one National Health Insurance (NHI) pilot district in South Africa. The theory uses motivation, information, power, resources and the interaction of these to explain implementation experiences and outcomes. The research question centred on the utility of CIT tenets in explaining the observed implementation experiences of actors and outcomes particularly policy- practice gaps. Results: All CIT central tenets (information, motivation, power, resources and interactions) were alluded to by actors in their policy implementation experiences, a lack or presence of these tenets were explained as either a facilitator or barrier to policy implementation. This theory was found as very useful in explaining policy implementation experiences of both policy makers and facilitators. Conclusion: A central tenet that was present in this context but not fully captured by CIT was leadership. Leadership interactions were revealed as critical for policy implementation, hence we propose the inclusion of leadership interactions to the current CIT central tenets, to become motivation, information, power, resources, leadership and interactions of all these.
AB - Background: World-wide, there is growing universal health coverage (UHC) enthusiasm. The South African government began piloting policies aimed at achieving UHC in 2012. These UHC policies have been and are being rolled out in the ten selected pilot districts. Our study explored policy implementation experiences of 71 actors involved in UHC policy implementation, in one South African pilot district using the Contextual Interaction Theory (CIT) lens. Method: Our study applied a two-actor deductive theory of implementation, Contextual Interaction Theory (CIT) to analyse 71 key informant interviews from one National Health Insurance (NHI) pilot district in South Africa. The theory uses motivation, information, power, resources and the interaction of these to explain implementation experiences and outcomes. The research question centred on the utility of CIT tenets in explaining the observed implementation experiences of actors and outcomes particularly policy- practice gaps. Results: All CIT central tenets (information, motivation, power, resources and interactions) were alluded to by actors in their policy implementation experiences, a lack or presence of these tenets were explained as either a facilitator or barrier to policy implementation. This theory was found as very useful in explaining policy implementation experiences of both policy makers and facilitators. Conclusion: A central tenet that was present in this context but not fully captured by CIT was leadership. Leadership interactions were revealed as critical for policy implementation, hence we propose the inclusion of leadership interactions to the current CIT central tenets, to become motivation, information, power, resources, leadership and interactions of all these.
KW - Context
KW - Contextual interaction theory
KW - Implementation
KW - Information
KW - Interactions
KW - Leadership
KW - Motivation
KW - Policy-practice gaps
KW - Resources
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85126302522&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12913-022-07705-z
DO - 10.1186/s12913-022-07705-z
M3 - Article
C2 - 35292050
AN - SCOPUS:85126302522
SN - 1472-6963
VL - 22
JO - BMC health services research
JF - BMC health services research
IS - 1
M1 - 343
ER -