China's Internet Plus Nursing Services Policy Analysis, 2018-2025
by Yuzhe Wang·Updated 29d ago
47.2 KB1files
Available on 1 platform
Sign in to view source links and access this dataset
Description
A 2026 study analyzing 123 national and local policy documents on China's Internet Plus Nursing Services issued between 2018 and 2025. The research, authored by Yuzhe Wang, applies a three-dimensional analytical framework to examine thematic structures, policy tool configurations, and design quality across governance levels.
Use Cases
Analyzing hierarchical differentiation in policy themes between national and local governance based on the keyword co-occurrence analysis mentioned.
Evaluating the configuration and balance of policy instruments (e.g., environment-oriented vs. supply/demand-side) using the Rothwell and Zegveld framework.
Assessing policy design consistency and identifying gaps in coverage or evaluation mechanisms via the Policy Modeling Consistency (PMC) index scores.
Comparing structural characteristics of digital nursing service policies across different governance levels as described in the results.
Strengths
Analyzes a defined corpus of 123 policy documents from a specific time range (2018-2025).
Applies a multi-level governance perspective and a replicable three-dimensional analytical framework.
Provides quantitative PMC index scores (e.g., national 7.98 vs. local 7.31) for design consistency comparison.
Limitations
The dataset is a 47.2 KB DOCX file containing analysis, not the raw policy data; the underlying document corpus is not directly provided.
Column-level documentation for any potential structured data is absent; field semantics must be inferred from the text.
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment for quantitative reuse.
Provenance
Source
figshare
Collection Method
Analysis of 123 national and local policy documents using keyword co-occurrence, policy instrument, and PMC index frameworks.
Time Range
2018 to 2025
Freshness
Last updated 2026 05 08 05:40:43.
Geography
China
License is CC-BY-4.0. The primary content is a research analysis document in DOCX format.