
Contents
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Healthcare goods as social goods Healthcare goods as social goods
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Person power – digitally delivered? Person power – digitally delivered?
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Collective responsibility for health: asking too much? Collective responsibility for health: asking too much?
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Those with special responsibilities Those with special responsibilities
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Expansive learning for new healthcare architectures Expansive learning for new healthcare architectures
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Abstract
This concluding chapter asks how health policy needs to change character in the light of the transitions and tensions reviewed in the book. The emphasis in health policy has to move more decisively from a delivery model to a deliberative model of healthcare; or, in other words, from an assumed model of ‘top-down’ service provision towards a more diffused and democratic model. Moreover, the philosophical transition explored in the book should, in part, be seen as a transition towards philosophy, because philosophical questions are now manifestly at the centre of healthcare debate and activity. The chapter then presents some substantive conclusions about the key balancing acts that need to be struck in shaping the future of healthcare, including the balance between the responsibilities of policy makers and professionals, on the one hand, and the collective responsibility of patients and publics, on the other.
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