Bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity: policy evaluation and transnational lessons from Guizhou’s targeted medical assistance program

This study evaluated the sustainability of precision medical assistance policy in Guizhou Province through macro, meso and micro stakeholder analysis, combined with policy documents, statistical data and international comparison cases. The core objective is to identify barriers to long-term policy e...

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Main Author: Kedi Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Public Health
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2025.1621223/full
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author Kedi Sun
author_facet Kedi Sun
author_sort Kedi Sun
collection DOAJ
description This study evaluated the sustainability of precision medical assistance policy in Guizhou Province through macro, meso and micro stakeholder analysis, combined with policy documents, statistical data and international comparison cases. The core objective is to identify barriers to long-term policy effectiveness and make evidence-based recommendations for improvement by drawing on global practice. This study used a three-tier stakeholder framework to analyze stakeholder dynamics at the macro level (national/local government), meso level (hospitals and medical teams in eastern Guizhou), and micro level (rural communities). Key findings reveal systemic sustainability challenges: at the macro level, unequal resource allocation and a “culture of dependency” on external assistance undermine local capacity building; At the meso-level, short-term personnel rotation (1–3 months on average), weak institutional management, and cultural mismatch (such as between the eastern team and Guizhou ethnic minorities) undermine service continuity; At the micro level, low policy awareness (due to poor communication in rural areas) and nonadherence to health behaviors (such as refusal to accept Western diagnoses in contrast to traditional practices) reduced the effectiveness of the intervention. Drawing on six decades of Chinese healthcare collaboration in Africa (with an emphasis on long-term capacity building and cultural integration) and Australia’s modified Monash Model (MMM) of rural talent retention (through hierarchical financial incentives and career pathways), the study proposes a three-dimensional framework: (1) local talent development (e.g., scholarship and rural career trajectories modeled on MMM); (2) Cross-regional collaboration for acculturation training (inspired by the pre-deployment immersion training for African medical teams); (3) culturally sensitive interventions (e.g., integration of traditional healers into primary care). These recommendations aim to provide actionable insights into health policy in resource-poor rural areas in China and globally, moving from short-term aid to strengthening sustainable local health systems.
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spelling doaj-art-1a3ec3cf15da4ff2822d83361336be272025-08-20T03:32:24ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Public Health2296-25652025-06-011310.3389/fpubh.2025.16212231621223Bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity: policy evaluation and transnational lessons from Guizhou’s targeted medical assistance programKedi SunThis study evaluated the sustainability of precision medical assistance policy in Guizhou Province through macro, meso and micro stakeholder analysis, combined with policy documents, statistical data and international comparison cases. The core objective is to identify barriers to long-term policy effectiveness and make evidence-based recommendations for improvement by drawing on global practice. This study used a three-tier stakeholder framework to analyze stakeholder dynamics at the macro level (national/local government), meso level (hospitals and medical teams in eastern Guizhou), and micro level (rural communities). Key findings reveal systemic sustainability challenges: at the macro level, unequal resource allocation and a “culture of dependency” on external assistance undermine local capacity building; At the meso-level, short-term personnel rotation (1–3 months on average), weak institutional management, and cultural mismatch (such as between the eastern team and Guizhou ethnic minorities) undermine service continuity; At the micro level, low policy awareness (due to poor communication in rural areas) and nonadherence to health behaviors (such as refusal to accept Western diagnoses in contrast to traditional practices) reduced the effectiveness of the intervention. Drawing on six decades of Chinese healthcare collaboration in Africa (with an emphasis on long-term capacity building and cultural integration) and Australia’s modified Monash Model (MMM) of rural talent retention (through hierarchical financial incentives and career pathways), the study proposes a three-dimensional framework: (1) local talent development (e.g., scholarship and rural career trajectories modeled on MMM); (2) Cross-regional collaboration for acculturation training (inspired by the pre-deployment immersion training for African medical teams); (3) culturally sensitive interventions (e.g., integration of traditional healers into primary care). These recommendations aim to provide actionable insights into health policy in resource-poor rural areas in China and globally, moving from short-term aid to strengthening sustainable local health systems.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2025.1621223/fullhealth povertymedical assistancelack of healthcare expertsChinese medical assistance in AfricaAustralian modified Monash model (MMM)stakeholder analysis
spellingShingle Kedi Sun
Bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity: policy evaluation and transnational lessons from Guizhou’s targeted medical assistance program
Frontiers in Public Health
health poverty
medical assistance
lack of healthcare experts
Chinese medical assistance in Africa
Australian modified Monash model (MMM)
stakeholder analysis
title Bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity: policy evaluation and transnational lessons from Guizhou’s targeted medical assistance program
title_full Bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity: policy evaluation and transnational lessons from Guizhou’s targeted medical assistance program
title_fullStr Bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity: policy evaluation and transnational lessons from Guizhou’s targeted medical assistance program
title_full_unstemmed Bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity: policy evaluation and transnational lessons from Guizhou’s targeted medical assistance program
title_short Bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity: policy evaluation and transnational lessons from Guizhou’s targeted medical assistance program
title_sort bridging the sustainability gap in rural health equity policy evaluation and transnational lessons from guizhou s targeted medical assistance program
topic health poverty
medical assistance
lack of healthcare experts
Chinese medical assistance in Africa
Australian modified Monash model (MMM)
stakeholder analysis
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2025.1621223/full
work_keys_str_mv AT kedisun bridgingthesustainabilitygapinruralhealthequitypolicyevaluationandtransnationallessonsfromguizhoustargetedmedicalassistanceprogram