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Policy processes leading to the adoption of 'Jamie's Ministry of Food' programme in Victoria, Australia
journal contribution
posted on 2022-02-01, 00:00 authored by B Clarke, J Kwon, Boyd SwinburnBoyd Swinburn, Gary SacksGary SacksSummary
This study investigated the policy processes related to the 2012 adoption of the Jamie’s Ministry of Food programme by the Victorian Government in Australia. The aim was to provide insight into obesity prevention policy change processes to help strengthen future health promotion action. State-level government policy processes were examined through key informant interviews and a review of relevant documentation. Data were analysed using the Multiple Streams Theory and the Advocacy Coalition Framework in order to understand influences on relevant policy processes and strategies used by policy advocates to facilitate policy adoption. We found that policy adoption was facilitated by dedicated national funding for preventive health at that time, the relatively small number of stakeholders involved in the policy development process and the anticipated support for the programme by the general public due to the association with celebrity chef, Jamie Oliver. We identified that policy brokers aligned the policy with decision-maker ideologies and broader government objectives, and proactively managed potential criticisms. Evidence of intervention effectiveness was not a major driver of policy adoption. We conclude that, iven the complexity of policy processes for obesity prevention, multiple, reinforcing strategies are likely to be needed to facilitate policy change. Support for the adoption of obesity prevention policies is likely to increase when framing of policy options aligns with decision-maker values and has broad public appeal.
This study investigated the policy processes related to the 2012 adoption of the Jamie’s Ministry of Food programme by the Victorian Government in Australia. The aim was to provide insight into obesity prevention policy change processes to help strengthen future health promotion action. State-level government policy processes were examined through key informant interviews and a review of relevant documentation. Data were analysed using the Multiple Streams Theory and the Advocacy Coalition Framework in order to understand influences on relevant policy processes and strategies used by policy advocates to facilitate policy adoption. We found that policy adoption was facilitated by dedicated national funding for preventive health at that time, the relatively small number of stakeholders involved in the policy development process and the anticipated support for the programme by the general public due to the association with celebrity chef, Jamie Oliver. We identified that policy brokers aligned the policy with decision-maker ideologies and broader government objectives, and proactively managed potential criticisms. Evidence of intervention effectiveness was not a major driver of policy adoption. We conclude that, iven the complexity of policy processes for obesity prevention, multiple, reinforcing strategies are likely to be needed to facilitate policy change. Support for the adoption of obesity prevention policies is likely to increase when framing of policy options aligns with decision-maker values and has broad public appeal.
History
Journal
Health Promotion InternationalVolume
37Issue
1Article number
daab079Pagination
1 - 14Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)Location
Oxford, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
0957-4824eISSN
1460-2245Language
EnglishPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
ADVOCACY COALITIONSCHILDHOOD OBESITYCOOKINGcooking skillsFRAMEWORKHealth Care Sciences & ServicesHealth Policy & ServicesHEALTH-PROMOTIONINTERVENTIONSLife Sciences & BiomedicineNUTRITIONobesity preventionpolicy processpolicy theoryPREVENTIONPublic, Environmental & Occupational HealthQUALITATIVE RESEARCHRESOURCESScience & Technology