Abstract

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.

Highlights

  • Governments, health professionals and civil society stretch sectoral comfort zones by addressing determinants of health in diverse policy and practice arenas

  • As the challenges of intersectoral public health governance emerge, though, public health scholars increasingly call for the use of innovative approaches for analyzing collaboration over time, including theoretical insights from disciplines characterized by complexities analogous to public health [2,3,4]

  • Introduced by Janda and Parag [5] and Parag and Janda [6] to support the analysis of energy decarbonization, Middle-Out clarifies and highlights the role of Middle Actors-stakeholders positioned between policymakers and the grassroots—as agents of change

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Summary

Introduction

Governments, health professionals and civil society stretch sectoral comfort zones by addressing determinants of health in diverse policy and practice arenas. Public health’s homegrown governance frameworks, such as Health in All Policies (HiAP) and Healthy Cities, have vastly broadened the scope of the literature’s definition of “health,” and expanded the network of individuals and agencies that practitioners perceive to be potential partners in health [1]. Introduced by Janda and Parag [5] and Parag and Janda [6] to support the analysis of energy decarbonization, Middle-Out clarifies and highlights the role of Middle Actors-stakeholders positioned between policymakers and the grassroots—as agents of change. Its lessons, they explain, can be critical in all socio-technical contexts, such as public health

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