Timing In Public Health Policy. The Case Of Polish Policy In The Field Of Hospital Care

Abstract:

The study addresses the problem of optimal public policy timing and in relation to public health policy. There have been presented ways of recognising this problem and the role of public policy timing, which is perceived or can be performed from various economic theories and concepts, mainly: regulation theory, the concept of adaptive public policy, theory of policy timing based on the concepts of option value and the transaction costs of the political process. The approach of methodological pluralism adopted by the authors made it possible to reach for various cognitive inspirations, borrowed from numerous theoretical approaches, in order to create a comprehensive and coherent theoretical foundation for the purposes of analysing the role of timing in applied public policies. Next, an attempt was made to define the role of public policy timing in the applied approach, i.e. on the case of Polish policy towards the public hospital care sector. The general conclusion is that the role of timing is marginalised in Polish public health policy. The time dimension of its creation was ignored or treated as an exogenous event in relation to the rest of the policy formulation process. There is no political approach that adaptively links the right combination of resources and regulatory activity to timing for specific stages of development or growth in public hospital care.