'Kontra-Partido': Untangling Oppositional Local Politics and Healthcare Devolution in the Philippines

A long-recognized problem of healthcare devolution in many developing countries is its inextricability from the influences of local politics. This has been particularly self-evident in the Philippines, where, since the adoption of the Local Government Code of 1991, the devolution of health governanc...

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Main Authors: Yu, Vincen Gregory, Lasco, Gideon, David, Clarissa C, Baysic, Ivyrose
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2023
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/270
https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czad039
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.asog-pubs-12722023-09-18T07:21:58Z 'Kontra-Partido': Untangling Oppositional Local Politics and Healthcare Devolution in the Philippines Yu, Vincen Gregory Lasco, Gideon David, Clarissa C Baysic, Ivyrose A long-recognized problem of healthcare devolution in many developing countries is its inextricability from the influences of local politics. This has been particularly self-evident in the Philippines, where, since the adoption of the Local Government Code of 1991, the devolution of health governance, planning, administration and service delivery has placed the health system largely under the control of individual provinces, cities, municipalities and villages or barangays. In this article, we utilize the notion of 'kontra-partido' (the Filipino term connoting 'oppositional politics') to concretize local, oppositional politics as a lived experience of health workers, government officials and ordinary citizens in the country. Through multi-sited qualitative fieldwork, we demonstrate how 'kontra-partido' politics ultimately worsens health outcomes in any locality. We show how such politics figures in the relational dynamics of health governance, often resulting in petty infighting and strained relationships among local health authorities; how it leads to the politicization of appointments and prevents the local workforce, especially those at the grassroots, from doing their jobs efficiently amid environments rife with hostile patronage; and how it impedes service delivery as politicians prioritize 'visible' projects (over sustainable ones) and selectively deliver health care to their known supporters. In turn, health workers and ordinary citizens alike have been actively negotiating their roles within this political milieu, either by joining the so-called political frontlines or by engaging in the transactional relationships that develop between politicians and their constituents during perennial election seasons. We conclude with a reflection on the vulnerability of health to politicization and the visceral consequences of 'kontra-partido' politics to health workers, as well as an identification of possible areas of intervention for future policy reform, given the deepening political polarization in the country and the upcoming implementation of the recently passed Universal Health Care Law. 2023-08-01T07:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/270 https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czad039 Ateneo School of Government Publications Archīum Ateneo decentralization Health governance health workforce politics of health the Philippines Health Services Administration Medicine and Health Sciences Other Public Health Public Health
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic decentralization
Health governance
health workforce
politics of health
the Philippines
Health Services Administration
Medicine and Health Sciences
Other Public Health
Public Health
spellingShingle decentralization
Health governance
health workforce
politics of health
the Philippines
Health Services Administration
Medicine and Health Sciences
Other Public Health
Public Health
Yu, Vincen Gregory
Lasco, Gideon
David, Clarissa C
Baysic, Ivyrose
'Kontra-Partido': Untangling Oppositional Local Politics and Healthcare Devolution in the Philippines
description A long-recognized problem of healthcare devolution in many developing countries is its inextricability from the influences of local politics. This has been particularly self-evident in the Philippines, where, since the adoption of the Local Government Code of 1991, the devolution of health governance, planning, administration and service delivery has placed the health system largely under the control of individual provinces, cities, municipalities and villages or barangays. In this article, we utilize the notion of 'kontra-partido' (the Filipino term connoting 'oppositional politics') to concretize local, oppositional politics as a lived experience of health workers, government officials and ordinary citizens in the country. Through multi-sited qualitative fieldwork, we demonstrate how 'kontra-partido' politics ultimately worsens health outcomes in any locality. We show how such politics figures in the relational dynamics of health governance, often resulting in petty infighting and strained relationships among local health authorities; how it leads to the politicization of appointments and prevents the local workforce, especially those at the grassroots, from doing their jobs efficiently amid environments rife with hostile patronage; and how it impedes service delivery as politicians prioritize 'visible' projects (over sustainable ones) and selectively deliver health care to their known supporters. In turn, health workers and ordinary citizens alike have been actively negotiating their roles within this political milieu, either by joining the so-called political frontlines or by engaging in the transactional relationships that develop between politicians and their constituents during perennial election seasons. We conclude with a reflection on the vulnerability of health to politicization and the visceral consequences of 'kontra-partido' politics to health workers, as well as an identification of possible areas of intervention for future policy reform, given the deepening political polarization in the country and the upcoming implementation of the recently passed Universal Health Care Law.
format text
author Yu, Vincen Gregory
Lasco, Gideon
David, Clarissa C
Baysic, Ivyrose
author_facet Yu, Vincen Gregory
Lasco, Gideon
David, Clarissa C
Baysic, Ivyrose
author_sort Yu, Vincen Gregory
title 'Kontra-Partido': Untangling Oppositional Local Politics and Healthcare Devolution in the Philippines
title_short 'Kontra-Partido': Untangling Oppositional Local Politics and Healthcare Devolution in the Philippines
title_full 'Kontra-Partido': Untangling Oppositional Local Politics and Healthcare Devolution in the Philippines
title_fullStr 'Kontra-Partido': Untangling Oppositional Local Politics and Healthcare Devolution in the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed 'Kontra-Partido': Untangling Oppositional Local Politics and Healthcare Devolution in the Philippines
title_sort 'kontra-partido': untangling oppositional local politics and healthcare devolution in the philippines
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2023
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/270
https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czad039
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