# Governing health through security in the Philippines: a realist analysis

**Authors:** Delaram Akhavein, Lea Elora A Conda, Sary Valenzuela, Percival Ethan Lao, Meru Sheel, Seye Abimbola, Geminn Louis C Apostol

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czaf110 · 2025-12-12

## TL;DR

This study explores how health is framed as a security issue in the Philippines, showing how it affects decision-making and priorities in health governance.

## Contribution

The study introduces a realist analysis of health security framing and its influence on governance and policy priorities in the Philippines.

## Key findings

- Health security framing promotes centralized, top-down governance in the Philippines.
- Security norms become institutionalized with military and security actors involved in health.
- Health security mobilizes resources but risks increasing inequities and ignoring structural health issues.

## Abstract

As global framings of health continue to expand their reach, the Philippines, like many other countries, must navigate the overlapping pressures of donors, international institutions, and domestic political agendas in setting priorities. One such framing is the framing of health as a security issue. This study examines how health security framing—how it is interpreted and operationalized—influences priority-setting in the Philippines. Drawing on 25 interviews with government (at national and sub-national levels) and non-government actors and using a realist approach, this study sought to identify the outcomes of health security framing (as triggered or reinforced by mechanisms such as uncertainty, self-protection, self-preservation, self-reliance, and norm-setting) and the context in which the outcomes manifest. Findings show that health security framing reshapes priorities by reinforcing centralized, top-down approaches at both international and national levels. These framings influence not only what is prioritized but also which actors make decisions and how those decisions are justified. At the implementation level, it manifests in health workers facing misaligned operational frameworks, vertical programming, and burdensome reporting requirements tied to donor funding. Security norms become institutionalized with the involvement of military and security actors in health. The study demonstrates that health security is not a static concept, but a dynamic phenomenon co-constructed through global discourses, donor agendas, and domestic governance practices, all of which are shaped by power relations and history. While health security mobilizes resources and political attention, it also introduces trade-offs that risk exacerbating inequities and diverting attention from the structural determinants of health.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** influenza (MESH:D007251), COVID (MESH:D000086382), Dengue (MESH:D003715), infectious disease (MESH:D003141), Ebola (MESH:D019142), TB (MESH:D014390), HIV/AIDS (MESH:D015658), Zika (MESH:D000071243)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12906756/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12906756