Healthcare in the UK: Understanding continuity and change
Healthcare in the UK: Understanding continuity and change
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Abstract
The National Health Service (NHS) is undergoing a period of significant reform, with the reintroduction of the internal market, a focus on patient choice and the controversial introduction of ‘foundation hospitals’ — all central to New Labour's strategy for changing healthcare in the UK. This book contends that attempts to reform the NHS can only be understood by reference to both the wider social and political contexts, and to the organisational and ideational legacies present within the NHS itself. It aims to take students beyond a basic understanding of the historical development of health policy in the UK, to one that demonstrates an appreciation of the interactions between health policy, organisation and society. The book acts as a bridge between conventional textbooks on the NHS and contemporary health policy research, provides an account of the development of policy and organisational change not found elsewhere and provides recommendations for how the NHS can be better organised in the future.
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