107 results
Search Results
2. A case for the development of departments of gerocomy in all district general hospitals: discussion paper.
- Author
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Millard, P. H.
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,GERIATRICS ,MEDICAL care for older people ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
The article focuses on the alteration in health care model for elderly people in Great Britain. The need for the change in treatment approach emerged due to diminishing younger workforce and rapidly growing number of elderly people. The effectiveness of all advances in care for the elderly is undermined by government policies and particularly due to the ways of spending money.
- Published
- 1991
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3. Co-production in health policy and management: a comprehensive bibliometric review.
- Author
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Fusco, Floriana, Marsilio, Marta, and Guglielmetti, Chiara
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PUBLIC administration ,HEALTH policy ,LITERATURE translations ,SCHOLARLY periodicals ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Background: Due to an increasingly elderly population, a higher incidence of chronic diseases and higher expectations regarding public service provision, healthcare services are under increasing strain to cut costs while maintaining quality. The importance of promoting systems of co-produced health between stakeholders has gained considerable traction both in the literature and in public sector policy debates. This study provides a comprehensive map of the extant literature and identifies the main themes and future research needs.Methods: A quantitative bibliometric analysis was carried out consisting of a performance analysis, science mapping, and a scientific collaboration analysis. Web of Science (WoS) was chosen to extract the dataset; the search was refined by language, i.e. English, and type of publication, i.e. journal academic articles and reviews. No time limitation was selected.Results: The dataset is made up of 295 papers ranging from 1994 to May 2019. The analysis highlighted an annual percentage growth rate in the topic of co-production of about 25%. The articles retrieved are split between 1225 authors and 148 sources. This fragmentation was confirmed by the collaboration analysis, which revealed very few long-lasting collaborations. The scientific production is geographically polarised within the EU and Anglo-Saxon countries, with the United Kingdom playing a central role. The intellectual structure consists of three main areas: public administration and management, service management and knowledge translation literature. The co-word analysis confirms the relatively low scientific maturity of co-production applied to health services. It shows few well-developed and central terms, which refer to traditional areas of co-production (e.g. public health, social care), and some emerging themes related to social and health phenomena (e.g. the elderly and chronic diseases), the use of technologies, and the recent patient-centred approach to care (patient involvement/engagement).Conclusions: The field is still far from being mature. Empirical practices, especially regarding co-delivery and co-management as well as the evaluation of their real impacts on providers and on patients are lacking and should be more widely investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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4. Linking Health and Wellbeing in Public Discourse and Policy: The Case of the UK.
- Author
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Dalingwater, Louise
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HEALTH policy ,WELL-being ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POLICY discourse - Abstract
Copyright of Interventions Économiques is the property of Association d'Economie Politique and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
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5. The Conflict Between Public Health And Civil Liberties: The Initial UK Government Policy Response to the Covid-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Mujib, Minaa
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PUBLIC health ethics ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CIVIL rights ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
This paper aims to illustrate the tension between public health and civil liberties through the case study of the UK government's emergency response to the Covid-19 pandemic. In the area of public health, this tension is predominantly approached by reference to two theories: liberalism and communitarianism. This paper studies these positions and how they are manifested in evidence-based policymaking by combining a study of public health policy with a study of public health ethics. The studies help demonstrate the UK government's framing of health policy relating to Covid-19 in terms of liberalism and communitarianism. The paper concludes that in the initial UK government response to Covid-19, the government discourse evoked communitarian values and framed its policies as being evidence-led and as prioritising public health. However, the policy measures themselves manifested liberal values: they had the underlying concern of not infringing excessively on civil liberties, and individuals were given autonomy of decision making within the measures that were taken. The article concluded that emergency times require a communitarian response based on preventative action. This article is the first to combine public health policy with public health ethics to demonstrate how values form a key part of decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Informal dementia care: The carer's lived experience at the divides between policy and practice.
- Author
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Britton, Anthony and Zimmermann, Martina
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CAREGIVER attitudes ,HEALTH policy ,SERVICES for caregivers ,PRACTICAL politics ,LOCAL government ,EXPERIENCE ,DEMENTIA ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,LOBBYING - Abstract
Support for informal dementia care at a local community level is not working for most carers today. Carers looking after a person with dementia have long lamented the absence of an empowered named support and an effectively actioned care plan. Drawing on literary writing and social research, we argue in this article that these challenges have existed since dementia emerged as a major condition in the West during the 1980s. Based on this historical context, we ask: Why has this issue persisted over the last four decades? How have healthcare politics and policy initiatives responded to these requests? And what can we learn from this for the current, COVID-19 exacerbated crisis of care? This article focuses on the English context, to discuss these ongoing challenges in the light of a series of policy papers, and to ask what is hampering the implementation of such policy initiatives. In England, local authorities are responsible for dementia support. This article focuses on the situation in a county in the Midlands where one of us (AB) has been lobbying local government for over a decade. The discussion contextualises the lived experience of dementia care within the situation exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, ensuing politics of crises and persistent emphasis on cure over care. We find that the absence on two points centrally challenges care: a joined-up approach between health and social care and adequate information on available care support services, accessible through an empowered named contact. To enhance the lived experience of dementia care, consistent provision of individual named support and professional care support, as and when required, should become essential to local implementation of the care policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. History and its contribution to understanding addiction and society.
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Berridge, Virginia
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DRUG abuse ,DRUG abuse policy ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,HEALTH policy ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,HISTORY of research ,PRACTICAL politics ,GOVERNMENT policy ,BOOKS ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper provides a personal memoir of historical work at the Addiction Research Unit, in particular the genesis of the book Opium and the People. This topic had policy significance for US drug policy and a competing US study was funded. The development of the substance use history field is surveyed, and its expansion in recent times through a focused professional association and a critical mass of researchers in the area, covering a wide range of topics. The politics of using history in this area can be problematic. History now sits at the policy table more easily, but there is still a tendency for professionals in the field to use (and misuse) it, rather than calling on the interpretive and challenging approach they would obtain from professional historians. The paper calls for historians and others to move beyond a substance specific focus and to avoid the tendency for 'naive history' implicit in using only digitized industry archives as the sole source. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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8. Is the end in sight? A study of how and why services are decommissioned in the English National Health Service.
- Author
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Williams, Iestyn, Harlock, Jenny, Robert, Glenn, Kimberly, John, and Mannion, Russell
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ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,MEDICAL care ,NATIONAL health services ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,CASE studies ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The decommissioning of a health‐care service is invariably a highly complex and contentious process which faces many implementation challenges. There has been little specific theorisation of this phenomena, although insights can be transferred from wider literatures on policy implementation and change processes. In this paper, we present findings from empirical case studies of three decommissioning processes initiated in the English National Health Service. We apply Levine's (1979, Public Administration Review, 39(2), 179–183) typology of decommissioning drivers and insights from the empirical literature on pluralistic health‐care contexts, complex change processes and institutional constraints. Data include interviews, non‐participant observation and documents analysis. Alongside familiar patterns of pluralism and political partisanship, our results suggest the important role played by institutional factors in determining the outcome of decommissioning processes and in particular the prior requirement of political vulnerability for services to be successfully closed. Factors linked to the extent of such vulnerability include the scale of the proposed changes and extent to which they are supported at the macrolevel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Policy congruence and advocacy strategies in the discourse networks of minimum unit pricing for alcohol and the soft drinks industry levy.
- Author
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Hilton, Shona, Buckton, Christina H., Henrichsen, Tim, Fergie, Gillian, and Leifeld, Philip
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UNIT pricing ,ALCOHOLIC beverage sales & prices ,SOFT drink industry ,HEALTH policy ,SOFT drinks ,DISCOURSE analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MANUFACTURING industries & economics ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,BEVERAGES ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIAL networks ,CONSUMER activism - Abstract
Background and Aim: Public health policy development is subject to a range of stakeholders presenting their arguments to influence opinion on the best options for policy action. This paper compares stakeholders' positions in the discourse networks of two pricing policy debates in the United Kingdom: minimum unit pricing for alcohol (MUP) and the soft drinks industry levy (SDIL). Design Discourse analysis was combined with network visualization to create representations of stakeholders' positions across the two policy debates as they were represented in 11 national UK newspapers. Setting: United Kingdom. Observations: For the MUP debate 1924 statements by 152 people from 87 organizations were coded from 348 articles. For the SDIL debate 3883 statements by 214 people from 175 organizations were coded from 511 articles. Measurements Network analysis techniques were used to identify robust argumentative similarities and maximize the identification of network structures. Network measures of size, connectedness and cohesion were used to compare discourse networks. Findings The networks for both pricing debates involve a similar range of stakeholder types and form clusters representing policy discourse coalitions. The SDIL network is larger than the MUP network, particularly the proponents' cluster, with more than three times as many stakeholders. Both networks have tight clusters of manufacturers, think‐tanks and commercial analysts in the opponents' coalition. Public health stakeholders appear in both networks, but no health charity or advocacy group is common to both. Conclusion: A comparison of the discourse in the UK press during the policy development processes for minimum unit pricing for alcohol and the soft drinks industry levy suggests greater cross‐sector collaboration among policy opponents than proponents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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10. Place-making in support of preventative public health: Lessons arising from NHS England's Healthy New Towns project.
- Author
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Thrift, GB Julia
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GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health ,NATIONAL health services ,BUILT environment - Abstract
There is robust evidence that the places where people live have a profound influence on whether or not they are able to live healthy lives. This link between quality of place and well-being is now recognised by the UK's National Health Service (NHS) and is viewed as a key progenitor of pernicious health inequalities. Increasingly, it is also being recognised and reflected in UK national planning policy. Planning policy is weak, however, with few mandatory quality standards, and many of the new homes and places being built in the UK are of a poor quality. Unless there is an urgent effort to strengthen and co-ordinate national policy regarding public health, planning and housing, it is highly likely that the design and management of the built environment will continue to increase the already large health inequalities between rich and poor. In support of thinking anew about place-making as preventative public health, this paper reports insights and lessons arising from NHS England's Healthy New Towns project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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11. A policy analysis of the Expert Patient in the United Kingdom: self-care as an expression of pastoral power?
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Wilson, Patricia M.
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HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH self-care ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Abstract The rise in chronic illness and comorbidity in Western society has resulted in an increasing emphasis on self-care initiatives. In the United Kingdom this is exemplified by the Expert Patient policy. This paper discusses the Expert Patient initiative as an example of the State’s third way approach to public health. The extent to which this policy challenges conventional power relationships between professional and patient, and fosters equal partnership is examined. In particular, how expert is defined and whether a professional understanding of the term is reconcilable with a patient’s expertise is debated. The paper argues that the Expert Patient initiative is unlikely to reconstruct chronic illness and may further complicate the State’s responsibility in meeting the needs of those with chronic illness. Issues of power within self-care are explored to illuminate the policy, and this paper argues that the Expert Patient initiative is an example of Foucault’s notion of pastoral power. Although the Expert Patient policy focuses on the rights and responsibilities of those with chronic illness, this paper concludes that there is no corresponding strategy to challenge professionals’ assumptions toward those with chronic illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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12. Home level bureaucracy: moving beyond the 'street' to uncover the ways that place shapes the ways that community public health nurses implement domestic abuse policy.
- Author
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Cuthill, Fiona and Johnston, Lesley
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INTIMATE partner violence -- Law & legislation ,COMMUNITY health nursing ,NURSES' attitudes ,POLICY sciences ,PUBLIC administration ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PROFESSIONAL identity - Abstract
Street‐level bureaucracy is an increasingly useful way to understand how strategic policy is implemented in day‐to‐day practice. This approach has uncovered the ways that individual health and social care practitioners work within institutional constraints to influence policy implementation at the micro‐level. Nonetheless, despite the diversity of settings where these street‐level bureaucrats (SLBs) work, little attention has been focused on the impact of place on policy delivery. This paper draws on empirical research to examine the ways that delivering government domestic abuse policy in the intimate space of the family home shapes the delivery of strategic policy in the everyday. Drawing on qualitative research with Health Visitors (HVs) in the UK in 2016, the study findings illuminate the ways that the material, socio‐spatial and idealised boundaries of the family home shape the implementation of policy. Key themes in the HV's narratives emerged as they described themselves as both a danger and in danger in the family home. In challenging the ontological security of the home (Giddens 1990) – privacy, security and control are key concepts here – HVs described how they shape their actions to achieve policy outcomes while simultaneously managing threats to the home, to professional identity and to self. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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13. Reconfiguring Rights in Austerity Britain: Boundaries, Behaviours and Contestable Margins.
- Author
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MORRIS, LYDIA
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BEHAVIOR ,EMPLOYMENT ,HUMAN rights ,HUMANITY ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,HEALTH policy ,NOMADS ,PERSONAL space ,PUBLIC welfare ,REFUGEES ,SOCIAL skills ,TAXATION ,WAR ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
This paper addresses policy change in Britain since 2010 across the three fields of domestic welfare, migration and asylum, and analyses the association between welfare, conditionality and control through the lens of civic stratification. Drawing on the work of Richard Munch and Mary Douglas, it moves beyond existing literature in this area to show that the more complex the classification in play, and the more severe its boundary implications, the more likely the emergence of contestable margins. Informed by Munch's 'battlefield' approach, it provides a discussion of contestable margins in each of the three policy fields and outlines the nature and source of challenges that emerge within the 'institutional battlefield'. A concluding section reflects on what is revealed by viewing welfare, migration and asylum within the same conceptual frame, identifying an emergent welfare paradigm that displays recurrent problems across all three fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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14. Getting to grips with the cannabis problem: the evolving contributions and impact of Griffith Edwards.
- Author
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Hall, Wayne
- Subjects
DRUG control ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH policy ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,LEADERS ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Griffith Edwards played an important role in cannabis policy debates within government advisory committees in the United Kingdom from the early 1970s until the early 1980s. This has largely been hidden from public knowledge by the confidentiality of these committee discussions. The purpose of this paper is to use Griffith's writings and the results of recent historical scholarship to outline the views he expressed, the reasons he gave for them, and to provide a brief assessment of his contribution to the development of British cannabis policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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15. When transport policy becomes health policy: A documentary analysis of active travel policy in England.
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Bloyce, Daniel and White, Chris
- Subjects
- *
CYCLING , *TRAVEL hygiene , *CYCLING accidents , *HEALTH policy , *GOVERNMENT policy , *POLICY analysis - Abstract
There has been a succession of policy documents related to active travel published by the British government since the implementation of a National Cycle Network (NCN) in 1995. However, as the latest National Travel Survey (NTS) reveals, the number of journeys made by bike in the UK has remained steadfastly around only 2% (Department for Transport [DfT], 2018a). By using documentary analysis of the available official policy documents and statements, the aim of this paper is to make sense of the policies that have been published concerning active travel (AT) in England. This is done from a figurational sociological perspective. Three key themes emerge from the analysis: (1) the rhetorical, advisory level of the vast majority of the policies; (2) the reliance on a wide network of local authorities to implement AT policy; and (3) the focus placed on individuals to change their behaviour. Furthermore, the analysis reveals that despite a large number of policy publications from a range of government departments claiming to promote AT, little has actually changed in this time period in terms of a national agenda. Despite the successive policies, it seems there is little appetite on behalf of recent governments to make widespread infrastructural changes, where instead the focus has largely been on persuading the individual to seek more active modes of travel, increasingly for their own, individual 'health' gains. Highlights •The paper is based on documentary analysis of available official policy documents from UK government on active travel since 1996 • The findings reveal the largely rhetorical, advisory level of the vast majority of the policies, which contributes to a lack of overall success in promoting active travel • The lack of success is compounded further by a reliance on a wide network of local authorities to implement active travel policy, when most local authorities appear more concerned with transport issues related to motorised vehicles • The findings reveal that active travel policy has becoming increasingly focussed on health gains that might be made from increasing the number of trips made by bicycle • The overwhelming focus of the policy documents analysed, however, is on encouraging individuals to change their behaviour, a process regarded as 'healthism', and one most sociologists of health suggest is likely to fail as a result • We conclude by suggesting that if the government is serious about wanting to see a 'step change' in the way in which people travel, particularly over shorter distances, then there is a need to have a more forceful approach to implementing policy within local authorities at the same time as making more substantial infrastructure changes to encourage cycling [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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16. From polarity to plurality: Perceptions of COVID‐19 and policy measures in England and Scotland.
- Author
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Rendall, Jack, McHugh, Neil, Baker, Rachel, Mason, Helen, and Biosca, Olga
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BIOMECHANICS ,INFECTION control ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,RESEARCH funding ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH policy ,INTERVIEWING ,PUBLIC opinion ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,QUANTITATIVE research ,QUARANTINE ,STAY-at-home orders ,SURVEYS ,GOVERNMENT programs ,RESEARCH methodology ,FACTOR analysis ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study was to uncover perspectives on the COVID‐19 pandemic and the responses implemented by the UK and Scottish Governments to help control the spread of infection. Such understanding could help to inform future responses to pandemics at individual, community and national levels. Method: Q methodology was used to elicit perspectives from people in England and Scotland with different experiences of the pandemic including public health officials, key workers, those on furlough, those who were unvaccinated or vaccinated to different levels, those who were 'shielding' because they were at higher risk and people with different scientific expertise. Participants rank‐ordered phrases about different aspects of COVID‐19 according to their viewpoint. Factor analysis was then conducted in conjunction with interview material from the same respondents. Results: A four‐factor solution was statistically supported and was interpretable alongside the qualitative accounts of participants loading on these factors. These four perspectives are titled Dangerous and Unaccountable Leadership, Fear and Anger at Policy and Public responses, Governing Through a Crisis and Injustices Exposed. Conclusion: The four perspectives demonstrate plurality and nuance in views on COVID‐19 and the associated policies and restrictions, going beyond a binary narrative that has been apparent in popular and social media. The four perspectives include some areas of common ground, as well as disagreement. We argue that understanding the detail of different perspectives might be used to build cohesion around policy initiatives in future. Patient or Public Contribution: The development of the statement set, which is rank‐ordered by participants in a Q study, and factor interpretations were informed by views of the general public. The statement set was initially developed using existing publicly available material based on members of the general public experiencing the pandemic first hand. It was then piloted with members of the public experiencing different challenges as a result of COVID‐19 and the subsequent lockdown and updated based on feedback. Finally, interpretations of the identified factors were presented publicly and edited according to their feedback. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. The impact of domestic abuse for older women: a review of the literature.
- Author
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McGarry, Julie, Simpson, Chris, and Hinchliff‐Smith, Kathryn
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OLDER women -- Abuse of ,ABUSE of women ,INTIMATE partner violence ,DOMESTIC violence ,REPORTING of aged abuse ,CINAHL database ,HEALTH ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,NURSING databases ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDLINE ,SELF-evaluation ,WOMEN'S health ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DISCLOSURE ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,GOVERNMENT policy ,OLD age - Abstract
The consequences of domestic abuse are far reaching, impacting significantly on long-term health and emotional wellbeing of those affected. However, while the literature offers an insight into the scope and nature of domestic abuse among the younger population in the UK, there is currently little available data regarding older women and domestic violence. This is increasingly being recognised as a significant deficit in awareness and understanding within society as a whole and more particularly for those responsible for support and care provision. While research in this area may be scarce the work that has been undertaken to date would suggest that domestic abuse is both a significant and an under-recognised phenomenon, which has a wide-ranging impact on the lives and health of older women. It also suggests that older women's experiences of domestic abuse are markedly different from those in younger age groups and that these differences have not been adequately acknowledged or accounted for. Given that the UK has an ageing population and that emerging national policy initiatives are beginning to recognise domestic abuse as an issue for older women, it is fundamental that health and social care professionals are able to both identify domestic abuse and understand the particular experiences and needs of older women affected by domestic abuse. The aim of this literature review is threefold: (i) to provide a comprehensive summary of the impact of domestic abuse for older women particularly within the context of health, (ii) to explore the particular barriers to recognition and reporting abuse and (iii) to highlight the particular gaps in our knowledge and understanding from a policy and care provision perspective. A systematic approach to a review of the literature was used to identify key literature and available evidence relating to domestic abuse among older women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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18. Primary health care centres in the UK: putting policy into practice.
- Author
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Peter Jones, David Hillier, and Daphne Comfort
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MEDICAL centers ,HEALTH policy ,PRIMARY health care ,MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PUBLIC sector ,PRIVATE sector ,MEDICAL care ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The article presents a research paper exploring the issues associated with putting into practice the government policy for the development of new generation primary health care centres in Great Britain. It outlines the government policy issues propelling the development of such centres and describes five issues linked with the research subject, including health care quality, the location and accessibility, and the shifting balance of the private and the public provision. It also highlights the considerable controversy provoked by the British government's plan to develop the said centres amid the period when a rising number of property companies are entering the primary health care market.
- Published
- 2009
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19. Identifying the impact of government targets on waiting times in the NHS.
- Author
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Dimakou, Sofia, Parkin, David, Devlin, Nancy, and Appleby, John
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HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HOSPITAL waiting lists ,PATIENTS ,SURGERY ,ORTHOPEDICS ,OPHTHALMOLOGY - Abstract
Waiting times for elective surgery are a key issue for the NHS. The principal policy response in the English NHS has been to introduce maximum waiting time targets against which performance is measured and rewarded. The aim of this paper is to identify the effect of government targets on the distribution of waiting times in the NHS. Specifically, we investigate the following questions: How does the probability of admission for any given patient vary during the time that they wait? How is the probability of admission for any given waiting time affected by the targets? Can variations in waiting times be explained by clinical, patient, or provider-level characteristics? What implications may be drawn from our results with respect to providers’ managerial responses to the targets? This paper investigates these questions by applying duration analysis techniques to waiting time data from 2001/2002 and 2002/2003 for three specialties: general surgery, trauma & orthopaedics and ophthalmology. Estimation of survival functions reveals considerable variations in waiting times between specialties, operative procedures and hospitals. Hazard rates vary over time and peaks in them—high probabilities of admission—coincide with targets and change when targets change. Amongst patient characteristics, whether they are NHS or private and whether they are day or inpatient cases both influence waiting times, but other characteristics such as age, sex and ethnicity do not. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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20. Telling cultures: ‘cultural’ issues for staff reporting concerns about colleagues in the UK National Health Service.
- Author
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Ehrich, Kathryn
- Subjects
MEDICAL errors ,PHYSICIANS ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,PATIENT safety ,HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL sciences ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CORRUPTION - Abstract
Recent UK health policy initiatives promote a ‘no blame culture’ and learning from adverse events to enhance patient safety in the NHS. Similar initiatives exist in the USA and Australia. Changing the ‘blame culture’ in the NHS has been advocated in policy documents and inquiry reports for over a decade. Some key concepts that are used in the policy discourse –‘blame’; mistakes, errors and misdemeanours; and ‘culture’– are examined and considered in the light of pertinent social science literature to question some of the assumptions concerning these terms in the policy discourse, and to suggest some alternative questions and perspectives. The Three Inquiries, a recent series of statutory inquiries held in the UK, are used as a case study to explore some of the intra- and inter-professional difficulties of reporting errors and misconduct by medical practitioners. The paper offers an interpretive social science perspective as an alternative to more policy oriented and managerial approaches to patient safety issues, focusing on deeper structural aspects of organisational phenomena implicated in the ability or otherwise of medical and other healthcare staff to report mistakes and misconduct as one aspect of patient safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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21. Integrated mental health services in England: a policy paradox?
- Author
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England, Elizabeth and Lester, Helen
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,MENTAL health ,PRIMARY care ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of health care policy on the development of integrated mental health services in England. Data sources: Drawing largely from a narrative review of the literature on adult mental health services published between January 1997 and February 2003 undertaken by the authors, we discuss three case studies of integrated care within primary care, secondary care and across the primary/secondary interface for people with serious mental illness. Conclusion: We suggest that while the central thrust of a raft of recent Government policies in England has been towards integration of different parts of the health care system, policy waterfalls and implementation failures, the adoption of ideas before they have been thoroughly tried and tested, a lack of clarity over roles and responsibilities and poor communication have led to an integration rhetoric/reality gap in practice. This has particular implications for people with serious mental health problems. Discussion: We conclude with suggestions for strategies that may facilitate more integrated working. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
22. Actor networks, policy networks and personality disorder.
- Author
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Manning, Nick
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL sciences ,POLICY networks ,PERSONALITY disorders ,POLICY sciences ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In this paper two disparate areas of social science theory, actor–network theory and policy networks, will be brought to bear on the problem of explaining the rapid development of an area of medical science and health policy in the UK. There has been a surge of interest in the treatment and management of personality disorder from within both the psychiatric profession and government ministries, and particularly those personality disorders deemed to be severe or dangerous. This has resulted in the development of a new psychiatric classification, the ‘dangerous and severe personality disorder’ (DSPD), and the funding and development of a new service to deal with it. Major new mental health legislation has been set in train to provide legal backing for the pre–emptive detention of patients with such a diagnosis, despite widespread uncertainty over its status, reliability or predictive capability. In the process of presenting and analysing this development, actor–network theory and policy networks will themselves be reviewed and compared, and common and incompatible elements, foci and mechanisms identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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23. Anything but 'empowerment'? Smokers, tar and nicotine data and cigarette design.
- Author
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Cutler, Tony J. and Nye, David A.
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CIGARETTE smokers ,SELF-efficacy ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,SMOKING policy ,CIGARETTE industry ,NICOTINE ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
While there are important differences between the public health policies of Conservative governments of the 1980s and 90s and the current British Labour government a significant element of continuity is the emphasis on government facilitating informed choice by consumers as a key public health objective. The article considers such approaches to disclosure of health risks with respect to policy on the regulation of smoking. It argues that regulation, in this area, under the Conservatives has not served to ‘empower’ consumers and that such regulatory weaknesses appear to be replicated under its successor. Defects in regulation are traced with respect to disclosure of information on tar and nicotine ‘yields’; and cigarette design with respect to tip ventilation and the use of additives to increase nicotine delivery. It is argued that lack of disclosure and insufficient controls on the industry have led to consumers being misled concerning the relative risks of different types of cigarette. Equally, it is also likely that such deficiencies have enabled manufacturers to represent some cigarette types as ‘safe’. The paper concludes by arguing that, while the weaknesses of the current regulatory regime suggest the need for measures of increased disclosure and control of product design, there is also an unresolved tension as to whether ‘empowerment’ is an intrinsic goal of policy or a means to the achievement of public health targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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24. Do People Favour Policies that Protect Future Generations? Evidence from a British Survey of Adults.
- Author
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GRAHAM, HILARY, BLAND, J. MARTIN, COOKSON, RICHARD, KANAAN, MONA, and WHITE, PIRAN C. L.
- Subjects
CONFIDENCE intervals ,HEALTH policy ,POLICY sciences ,PUBLIC welfare ,RESEARCH funding ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DATA analysis software ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Long-range temporal choices are built into contemporary policy-making, with policy decisions having consequences that play out across generations. Decisions are made on behalf of the public who are assumed to give much greater weight to their welfare than to the welfare of future generations. The paper investigates this assumption. It briefly discusses evidence from sociological and economic studies before reporting the findings of a British survey of people's intergenerational time preferences based on a representative sample of nearly 10,000 respondents. Questions focused on two sets of policies: (i) health policies to save lives and (ii) environmental policies to protect against floods that would severely damage homes, businesses and other infrastructure. For both sets of policies, participants were offered a choice of three policy options, each bringing greater or lesser benefits to their, their children's and their grandchildren's generations. For both saving lives and protecting against floods, only a minority selected the policy that most benefited their generation; the majority selected policies bringing equal or greater benefits to future generations. Our study raises questions about a core assumption of standard economic evaluation, pointing instead to concern for future generations as a value that many people hold in common. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Coping With Change in the NHS: A Frontline District's Response to AIDS.
- Author
-
Ferlie, Ewan and Pettigrew, Andrew
- Subjects
AIDS ,MEDICAL care ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,DEBATE ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH policy ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
The core of this paper' is a case study of how a District Health Authority (Paddington and North Kensington, now Parkside DHA following a recent merger with Brent DHA) in Inner London responded to a major new health care issue of the 1980s-Aids, but the paper also seeks to locate this case study material within wider debates. What theories are there of organisational change which could be used to illuminate policy and service change in the health care sector? How, indeed, do we best study change in health care organisations? The paper is thus in three parts. In the first section we identify some streams of literature which act as a frame of reference defining our initial research question and discuss implications for methodology. The second section presents the case itself, while the last section discusses some emerging findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. THE POLITICS OF HEALTH CARE REFORM IN BRITAIN.
- Author
-
Griggs, Edwin
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POLITICIANS - Abstract
This article focuses on the politics in health care reforms in Great Britain. The state of the National Health Scheme had become an issue in the 1987 general election. Fundamental reform of the service, however, was not an election issue. The government were not committed to such reform, and the government's critics were largely concerned with the level of funding of the service. Only the alliance parties made radical proposals, endorsing aversion of the internal market idea. During 1987 and 1988 the NHS came to be perceived as being in a state of crisis by opposition politicians, commentators, the media and people working in it.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Assessing the profile of support for potential tobacco control policies targeting availability in Great Britain: a cross-sectional population survey.
- Author
-
Kock, Loren, Shahab, Lion, Moore, Graham, Shortt, Niamh K., Pearce, Jamie, and Brown, Jamie
- Subjects
CROSS-sectional method ,GOVERNMENT policy ,TOBACCO ,HEALTH policy ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SMOKING ,PUBLIC opinion ,SALES personnel ,AGE distribution ,PROFESSIONAL licenses ,TOBACCO products ,SOCIAL support ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,NEIGHBORHOOD characteristics - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The National Treatment Outcomes Research Study (NTORS) and its influence on addiction treatment policy in the United Kingdom.
- Author
-
Gossop, Michael
- Subjects
DRUG abuse treatment ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DRUGS & crime ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,METHADONE treatment programs ,HEALTH policy ,ALCOHOLISM ,CRIME ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,TREATMENT programs ,DRUG abusers ,RESIDENTIAL care ,DISEASE complications ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper describes the political origins of the National Treatment Outcomes Research Study (NTORS) and the outputs and impacts of the study. NTORS was designed to meet the request of the Health Secretary and of a Government Task Force for evidence about the effectiveness of the national addiction treatment services. NTORS was a prospective cohort study which investigated outcomes over a 5-year period of drug users admitted to four major treatment modalities: in-patient treatment, residential rehabilitation, methadone reduction and methadone maintenance programmes. The study investigated treatments delivered under day-to-day operating conditions. Outcomes showed substantial reductions in illicit drug use and reduced injecting risk behaviours. These changes were accompanied by improved psychological and physical health and by reductions in criminal behaviour. However, not all outcomes were so positive. There was a continuing mortality rate in the cohort of about 1% per year, and many clients continued to drink heavily throughout the 5-year follow-up. NTORS findings informed and influenced UK addiction treatment policy both at the time and subsequently. The findings were influential in supporting an immediate increase in funding for treatment, and Government Ministers have repeatedly cited NTORS as evidence of the effectiveness of addiction treatment. One finding that received political attention was that of the cost savings provided by treatment through reductions in crime. This important finding led to an unanticipated consequence of NTORS; namely, the greater focus on crime reduction that has increasingly been promoted as a political and social priority for drug misuse treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. 'Hoisted with our own petard': evidence and democratic deliberation on obesity.
- Author
-
Boswell, John
- Subjects
POLICY discourse ,HEALTH policy ,OBESITY ,PUBLIC health research ,DECISION making & psychology ,STATISTICAL decision making ,GOVERNMENT policy ,METHODOLOGY - Abstract
Key actors engaged in debate on obesity in Australia and the UK subscribe to radically different narratives about the nature, extent and even existence of this public health problem. Yet there is a common thread to these clashing narratives: evidence. All are emphatic that their story is 'evidence-based'. In this paper, I seek to examine this state of affairs by looking at how actors think about, use and interpret evidence across a range of sites of policy debate on this issue. In doing so, I contribute to academic inquiry about the place of evidence in democratic deliberation. Firstly, I find that there is a high degree of consensus among actors who promote differing interpretations of the issue on what evidence means and entails in the abstract. Secondly, I find that the differing narratives on obesity are underpinned by different interpretations of the evidence, but that internal inconsistencies affect each of these competing narratives as well. As such, I argue that policy actors should not be seen just as strategically marshalling convenient evidence to support a preconceived cause. Overall, I suggest that these findings have mixed implications for democratic deliberation on the issue, enhancing the deliberative side of the equation but undermining the democratic. I then point to ways in which the goals of evidence-based and democratic policymaking on this issue may be further reconciled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Urban green and blue spaces for influencing physical activity in the United Kingdom: A narrative review of the policy and evidence.
- Author
-
Leese, Callum and Al‐Zubaidi, Hussain
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,SAFETY ,UNIVERSAL design ,NON-communicable diseases ,PUBLIC health ,COMMUNITY support ,PHYSICAL activity ,ENVIRONMENTAL health ,PUBLIC spaces ,GOVERNMENT policy ,METROPOLITAN areas ,POLICY sciences ,ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Introduction: With the rapid growth of urbanization globally and in the UK, increasing attention is now being directed towards urban green spaces (UGS). The appeal of UGS to policymakers lies in their capacity to address multiple policy objectives, including improving physical and mental wellbeing, mitigating noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), combating climate change through carbon sequestration, providing climate adaptation measures, and enhancing biodiversity. Method: This narrative review gives an overview of the current literature and UK policy relating to urban green and blue spaces, with a particular focus on the use of UGS to increase physical activity levels. Results: UGS have a profound impact on public health, with evidence indicating their positive effect on both physical and psychological health. Thirty‐eight percent of adults in the UK do not live within 15 minutes of UGS, so policy makers at national and international level are aiming to address this gap. One reason for the health benefits of UGS is associated increased physical activity, a vital component needed to address the burden of non‐communicable disease. To effectively harness UGS to promote physical activity various factors must be considered; proximity and diversity of urban green spaces, and the presence of suitable infrastructure features. Tailoring UGS to meet the needs and preferences of different population demographics is essential, as is ensuring safety, and addressing barriers to access particularly for lower socio‐economic groups. The careful planning of UGS must avoid potential gentrification effects and displacement of vulnerable communities, whilst utilising the equigenic nature of UGS. Conclusions: To create a brighter future and capitalize on the potential of UGS, a collaborative approach is needed, involving communities, local governments, and national authorities. Primary‐care professionals, represented by organizations like the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP), can play a crucial role in advocating for UGS and physical activity, promoting their use, and providing guidance and support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Understanding policy: why health education policy is important and why it does not appear to work.
- Author
-
Evans, John, Davies, Brian, Rich, Emma, and DePian, Laura
- Subjects
HEALTH education ,HEALTH policy ,POSTSTRUCTURALISM ,SOCIAL theory ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Drawing on research investigating the impact of health imperatives around obesity, diet and exercise on the actions of teachers and pupils in schools, this paper offers a reflexive account of the relationships between the 'noise' of obesity discourse in the public domain, policies forged to tackle health issues and the realities of teaching in schools. Our analyses suggest that intersections of bio-policies, body pedagogies and human agents forge assemblages of meaning that frame and regulate but cannot determine either teachers' or young people's lives. Teachers and pupils experience the capriciousness of policies as they flow through specific school contexts and intersect with 'local' institutional cultures, expectations and interests. We suggest that Basil Bernstein's concepts and poststructural social theory prove useful when addressing how the aforementioned processes are emplaced, enacted and embodied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Advocating alcohol abstinence to pregnant women: Some observations about British policy.
- Author
-
Lowe, PamK. and Lee, EllieJ.
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,ALCOHOL use in pregnancy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MOTHERHOOD - Abstract
In 2007, the English Department of Health (DH) issued advice stating 'pregnant woman' and 'those trying to conceive' should abstain from drinking alcohol. As others have noted, this advice was issued despite their being no new evidence about the deleterious effects of low levels of alcohol consumption. In this paper, we argue this development is significant for the social construction of 'risk', since in advocating abstinence without an evidence base for this advice, policy makers formalise a connection between uncertainty and danger. We suggest this development has important implications, most obviously for pregnant women, certainly impacting on the nature of the advice they will now receive and likely more generally on their experience of the transition to motherhood. We suggest it has wider implications for individuals' experience also, as policy makers appear to be advocating the same approach to risk to non-pregnant people. Further, it suggests a noteworthy formalisation of a new definition of risk, which should be debated far more extensively, as it matters for the future development of health policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Reducing waiting times for hospital treatment: lessons from the English NHS.
- Author
-
Harrison, Anthony and Appleby, John
- Subjects
HOSPITAL care ,WAITING period ,HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In recent years, the English NHS has achieved substantial reductions in waiting times for hospital treatment. This paper considers first whether the data used by the Government provide an accurate description of changes in waiting times and identifies some of the limitations of the measures used. It then attempts to identify how reductions have been achieved. It argues that some features of central government policy have been important - such as the use of targets - others, such as the introduction of new private sector capacity have not. It also shows that changes at local level have been critical to achieving the recorded improvements, but the precise impact of these is hard to identify. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Reconciling Two Conflicting Tales of the English Health Policy Process Since 1997.
- Author
-
Alvarez-Rosete, Arturo and Mays, Nicholas
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POLITICAL planning ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
This article identifies and investigates the two seemingly conflicting tales that characterise the English health policy process at the national level since 1997. The first tale points to a high degree of central political control over the initiation and development of policy, and the maintenance of the system of strong central government, traditionally referred to as the ‘Westminster and Whitehall model’. The second tale describes a system of ‘network governance’, suggesting a more complex health policy process in which central government (in particular, the Department of Health as its agent) is weaker than before and no longer holds a monopoly over the health policy-making process. The paper reviews the limited empirical evidence on the English health policy process since 1997 to determine which of the two narratives more accurately captures the nature of it at the national level. It concludes that, while many of the trends noted by the ‘from-government-to-governance’ thesis are evident in the case of health policy, the process has been less affected than other areas of public policy by the appearance of new actors, the move to new institutional arenas and the transformation of relationships. Rather than one of the tales being right and the other wrong, as the literature in this area tends to suggest, it is more accurate to describe the current situation as marked by the simultaneous presence of different modes of policy-making — both ‘command-and-control’ as well as a more inclusive, complex set of mechanisms. Indeed, top-down coordination and control of the policy process may be seen as a response to the greater practical difficulties facing the ‘core executive’ in managing policy processes that involve an increased number of influential actors.British Politics (2008) 3, 183–203. doi:10.1057/bp.2008.2 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Cancer and Health Policy: The Postcode Lottery of Care.
- Author
-
Bungay, Hilary
- Subjects
CANCER ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Cancer is a major cause of death and ill health, accounting for roughly one in four deaths in the UK. Concern with cancer services was expressed in the 1990s when it was reported that the quality of cancer care was patchy and variable, and clinical outcomes varied in different parts of the country. The Calman-Hine Report (1995) produced specific recommendations for the reorganizing and reconfiguring of cancer services, but although the Conservative government, which commissioned the report, endorsed its suggestions no additional funding was provided to implement the proposed changes, and consequently there remained variations in provision across geographical areas and between patients with different cancer types. However, since 1997 the Labour government has targeted cancer, appointing a Cancer Tsar, announcing a package of measures to“fight the war against cancer”, including the publication of a) and with Tony Blair pledging to end the postcode lottery for cancer treatment. This paper explores the concept of the“postcode lottery of cancer care”, why it exists and whether measures taken since the Calman-Hine Report and the Cancer Plan will address it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Shifting the balance of power?: UK public health policy and capacity building.
- Author
-
Evans, David
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH policy ,COMMUNITY health services ,INSTITUTIONAL care ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PARTNERING between organizations - Abstract
A new Labour government was elected in the UK in May 1997 with a strongly stated commitment to improving public health and tackling inequalities. This focus on public health was part of a concerted attempt to tackle poverty and social exclusion through 'joined up thinking' across central government. Thus health inequalities were to be tackled 'upstream' through wider government initiatives. Fundamental to the government's policy has been the development of public health capacity, including a more multi-disciplinary public health workforce and greater partnership working at local level. Improving public health is a long-term project, however, and politicians' decisions are often driven by short-term election cycles. Midway into its first term, the government published The NHS Plan which re-focused policy attention on the problems of the health care system. As the 2001 election approached, the government launched Shifting the Balance of Power, a major re-organization of the English NHS with the intention of improving the 'delivery' of health care, but which also had profound implications for the public health function. This paper argues that UK government policy towards public health has been characterized by continuing and fundamental tensions. Far from empowering public health practitioners, these tensions in central policy have contributed to practitioners' uncertainty about their roles, and how they can meet the centre's increasing demands for demonstrable 'delivery'. The implications are considered for building capacity in the UK and for a wider systems understanding of capacity issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The National Health Service at a Critical Moment: when Brexit means Hectic.
- Author
-
COSTA-FONT, JOAN
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,NATIONAL health services ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,LABOR demand ,HEALTH policy ,PRACTICAL politics ,TRAVEL hygiene ,WAGES ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Leaving the European Union (so-called ‘Brexit’) is a ‘critical moment’ for health policy reform which can pave the way to different pathways, including, a ‘critical juncture’. Given that Brexit cannot be undone without a second referendum, it opens up opportunities to elude European constraints for reform along the lines of equity, employment rights and patient choice. Brexit deepens the financial crisis of the National Health Service (NHS) by increasing hiring costs and imposing new transaction costs to accommodate patient cross-border mobility and international public health needs. Given the weak sustainability of the NHS, it could lead to major system reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Policy paradoxes and the Vulnerable Persons Resettlement Scheme: How welfare policies impact resettlement support.
- Author
-
Haycox, Hannah
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL support ,WAR ,PUBLIC administration ,INTERVIEWING ,FAMILIES ,HEALTH care reform ,AT-risk people ,GOVERNMENT policy ,REFUGEES ,RELOCATION ,PUBLIC welfare ,GOVERNMENT aid ,SOCIAL integration - Abstract
The Vulnerable Persons Resettlement Scheme (VPRS) comprised the UK government's primary response to persons forcibly displaced by the Syrian civil war. Recipients were granted immediate recourse to public funds and a locally-based 12-month integration support plan, designed at the discretion of practitioners. Drawing on forty in-depth interviews with refugees and practitioners in two areas with contrasting local approaches, this article explores the tensions that emerged when broader central government policies (distinct from the VPRS), intersected with resettlement support in recipients' lives. Two current welfare reforms are identified and evaluated as having impacted resettled families' housing experiences: firstly; the Two-Child Limit and secondly; the Benefit Cap. The article demonstrates how the financial precarity produced by both policies undermined local practitioners' resettlement support. In doing so, the article challenges dominant policy narratives of exceptionality, locating those resettled within the routinised systems of precarity and conditionality embedded in the welfare system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Covid-19 in the UK: policy on children and schools.
- Author
-
Gurdasani, Deepti, Pagel, Christina, McKee, Martin, Michie, Susan, Greenhalgh, Trish, Yates, Christopher, Scally, Gabriel, and Ziauddeen, Hisham
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,COVID-19 ,IMMUNIZATION ,SOCIAL support ,COVID-19 vaccines ,RE-entry students ,INDOOR air pollution ,SOCIAL isolation ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SCHOOLS ,DECISION making ,COVID-19 testing ,COVID-19 pandemic - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. ‘Doing’ public health and ‘making’ public health practitioners: Putting policy into practice in ‘Starting Well’
- Author
-
Mackenzie, Mhairi
- Subjects
- *
TRAINING of public health personnel , *HEALTH policy , *HOME care services , *INTERVENTION (Social services) , *HEALTH planning , *FAMILY health , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Public health policy has arguably taken a new direction in the UK since 1997. This is typified by a review of the public health workforce. A key profession within this workforce is that of health visiting. Starting Well, a Scottish National Health Demonstration Project is one attempt to develop the public health role of health visitors. The project aimed to improve child health by providing intensive home visiting to families in Glasgow. This paper reports on a process study focused on whether Starting Well, an intervention exemplifying contemporary public health policy, could be operationalised through health visiting practice. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 44 staff responsible for developing and implementing the programme. Whilst greater contact with families allowed health visitors to develop their understanding of the life circumstances of their case-load families, the evaluation raised issues about the feasibility of systematically changing practice and demonstrated the difficulties of implementing an approach that relied as much on individual values and organisational context as formal guidelines and standardised tools. Furthermore, the ability of the systems and structures within which practitioners were operating to facilitate a broad public health approach was limited. The policy context for public health demands that increasing numbers of health workers are familiar with its principles and modus operandi. It remains, however, a contested area of work and its implementation requires change at a number of levels. This has implications for current policy assumptions about improving population health. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. 'Nurse entrepreneurs' a case of government rhetoric?
- Author
-
Traynor, Michael, Drennan, Vari, Goodman, Claire, Mark, Annabelle, Davis, Kathy, Peacock, Richard, and Banning, Maggi
- Subjects
- *
NURSING , *GOVERNMENT policy , *HEALTH policy , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Introduction: Nursing has come to play a prominent role in government health policy since 1997. Extending the scope of nursing practice into activities previously carried out by doctors can assist a managerialist and 'modernizing' project of increasing National Health Service (NHS) efficiency by removing demarcations between professional groups. Methods: Drawing on elements of poststructuralist linguistics, this paper presents an analysis of a key government speech in the context of a discussion of overall policy intentions. Results: The speech can be seen as an example of how government has attempted to use rhetoric to make its goals attractive to nurses. Conclusion: Policy-makers have to make their policies acceptable to those whom they expect to implement them. In this case, organizational efficiency, chiefly in terms of broader access to NHS services, as well as role substitution, is aligned with government policy promoting social enterprise and 'sold' to the nursing profession as enhancing its status compared with medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A comparative review of clinical governance arrangements in the UK.
- Author
-
Pridmore, Julia Ann and Gammon, John
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This article provides a comparative review of the interpretation and implementation of clinical governance frameworks within the four home countries of the UK - England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Clinical governance has become one of most significant and important concepts in modern health care. The article considers the policy background and the many definitions of clinical governance, but specifically compares the various strategic and operational approaches to delivery of clinical governance in different parts of the UK. It is suggested that these variations in approach, by each of the four UK countries, can lead to confusion for healthcare professionals in trying to understand, implement and monitor elements of clinical governance in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Estimating the potential impact of the Australian government's reformulation targets on household sugar purchases.
- Author
-
Coyle, Daisy H., Shahid, Maria, Dunford, Elizabeth K., Louie, Jimmy Chun Yu, Trieu, Kathy, Marklund, Matti, Neal, Bruce, and Wu, Jason H. Y.
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,ACQUISITION of property ,INGESTION ,DIETARY sucrose ,PACKAGED foods ,INCOME ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SHOPPING ,FOOD ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FOOD chemistry - Abstract
Background: Countries around the world are putting in place sugar reformulation targets for packaged foods to reduce excess sugar consumption. The Australian government released its voluntary sugar reformulation targets for nine food categories in 2020. We estimated the potential impact of these targets on household sugar purchases and examined differences by income. For comparison, we also modelled the potential impact of the UK sugar reduction targets on per capita sugar purchases as the UK has one of the most comprehensive sugar reduction strategies in the world. Methods: Grocery purchase data from a nationally representative consumer panel (n=7,188) in Australia was linked with a large database (FoodSwitch) with product-specific sugar content information for packaged foods (n=25,261); both datasets were collected in 2018. Potential reductions in per capita sugar purchases were calculated overall and by food category. Differences in sugar reduction across income level were assessed by analysis of variance. Results: In 2018, the total sugar acquired from packaged food and beverage purchases consumed at-home was 56.1 g/day per capita. Australia's voluntary reformulation targets for sugar covered 2,471/25,261 (9.8%) unique products in the FoodSwitch dataset. Under the scenario that all food companies adhered to the voluntary targets, sugar purchases were estimated to be reduced by 0.9 g/day per capita, which represents a 1.5% reduction in sugar purchased from packaged foods. However, if Australia adopted the UK targets, over twice as many products would be covered (n=4,667), and this would result in a more than four times greater reduction in sugar purchases (4.1 g/day per capita). It was also estimated that if all food companies complied with Australia's voluntary sugar targets, reductions to sugar would be slightly greater in low-income households compared with high-income households by 0.3 g/day (95%CI 0.2 - 0.4 g/day, p<0.001). Conclusions: Sugar-reduction policies have the potential to substantially reduce population sugar consumption and may help to reduce health inequalities related to excess sugar consumption. However, the current reformulation targets in Australia are estimated to achieve only a small reduction to sugar intakes, particularly in comparison to the UK's sugar reduction program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Constitutional rights to health care: the consequences of placing limits on the right to health care in several Western and Eastern European countries.
- Author
-
Den Exter, André, Hermans, Bert, and den Exter, André
- Subjects
- *
CIVIL rights , *MEDICAL care , *TREATIES , *COST control , *HEALTH policy , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONTRACTS , *ECONOMICS , *HEALTH , *HEALTH care rationing , *HUMAN rights , *HEALTH insurance , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *JURISPRUDENCE , *LEGISLATION , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL protocols , *NATIONAL health services , *PHYSICIANS , *POLICY sciences , *PUBLIC health , *RESEARCH , *RESOURCE allocation , *GOVERNMENT aid , *PRIVATE sector , *GOVERNMENT policy , *EVALUATION research , *PATIENT selection - Abstract
This paper examines the right to health care. Various expressions of this right may be distinguished. These include both individual rights and social rights which could be based upon international treaties and constitutional rights. They may be found in national health legislation and, in some cases, in jurisprudence. To analyze the consequences of limiting the right to health care, a framework for judicial review has been developed which encompasses these expressions of the right to health care. The framework was used to examine legal and health policy developments in three Western and two Eastern European countries. In Italy and the Netherlands the right to health care is protected constitutionally (but on differing legal bases) while the United Kingdom does not have a written constitution. In contrast, Hungary and Poland have for many years seen the state take responsible for the provision, administration and allocation of health care services and the right to health care was guaranteed theoretically but not in practice because of the lack of (financial) means. However, the Polish Constitution explicitly anticipates possible limitations of the right to health care. What all these countries have in common is a cost containment perspective where the future will bring even tighter limits on what resources patients may consume. Despite differences in legal structure between these countries, where they seem to converge is on the consequences of putting limitations on the right to health care. The courts in Italy, the Netherlands and the UK have formulated conditions drawn from the acceptance that this right has to be judged within the context of limited resources. It may be concluded that finding a compromise between the right to health care and cost containment policies could also be an issue, Eastern European countries will have to face in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. District Health Organization.
- Author
-
Kinston, Warren
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care reform ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Government policy in the UK has been to provide comprehensive personalized health care to the whole population free at the point of delivery. However, the first major attempt to unify and regionalize the service in 1974 left a number of problems, and a further restructuring of the, NHS was required. This article reports on the results of research into the 1982 restructuring. The main feature of this second reorganization was the formation of territorial entities called "Districts "', and their organizational subdivision into "Units ". The kind and level of work and authority assigned to Districts and Units is discussed. An important finding, seemingly counter to official policy, is the existence of small Districts which operate at the same level as Units of the larger Districts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Professional regulation. Part 10: professional relationships.
- Author
-
Fullbrook, Suzanne
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH policy , *NURSING , *GOVERNMENT policy , *NURSING education - Abstract
Some years ago the Government set out their plans for the regulation of Nurses and other health professionals in The NHS Plan (Department of Health [DH], 2000) and Making a Difference (DH, 1999). This year the government produced a new series of White Papers, aimed at bringing to fruition the earlier plans and the ideology that underpinned them. This article considers two such papers -- neither produced by a nurse, despite their impact on nursing work. High Quality Care for All (DH, 2008a) and A High quality Workforce (DH, 2008b) are discussed considering the power and control of health care delivery that doctors and nurses now enjoy. A conclusion is reached that whereas there is much talk of innovations in nursing ideology and clinical practice, and significant advances in nurse education and training designed to facilitate advanced and autonomous practice within the nursing profession, it is just that. The real positions of power and influence within clinical provision and practice have remained the same: held by civil servants and members of the medical profession. While nurses are represented it is at a lower level of influence and they are missing from the top table. The political level of decision making for Healthcare directly involves members of the medical profession but not nurses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Say 'Yes' to action.
- Subjects
VOTING ,PUBLIC health personnel ,GOVERNMENT policy ,WAGES ,HEALTH policy ,PRIME ministers ,PUBLIC sector ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The article discusses the significance of voting for the industrial action over pay policy in Great Britain. According to the organization Unite, voting "yes" for the policy could allow prime ministers to investigate public sector workers with derisory pay offers. It indicates that the industrial action would create re-open negotiations over pay to the British government. Moreover, the article also explains the effects of voting "yes" to the health care services received by the patients and clients.
- Published
- 2008
48. COVID-19 in aged care homes: a comparison of effects initial government policies had in the UK (primarily focussing on England) and Australia during the first wave.
- Author
-
Chan, Daniel Kam Yin, Mclaws, Mary-Louise, and Forsyth, Duncan Ronald
- Subjects
ELDER care ,OLD age homes ,COVID-19 ,HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Background: COVID-19 pandemic has had a major impact globally, with older people living in aged care homes suffering high death rates.Objectives: We aimed to compare the impact of initial government policies on this vulnerable older population between the UK and Australia during the first wave of attack.Methods: We searched websites of governments in the UK and Australia and media outlets. We examined the key policies including the national lockdown dates and the distribution of some important resources (personal protective equipment and testing) and the effects of these initial policies on the mortality rates in the aged care homes during the first wave of attack of COVID-19.Results: We found that both countries had prioritized resources to hospitals over aged care homes during the first wave of attack. Both countries had lower priority for aged care residents in hospitals (e.g. discharging without testing for COVID-19 or discouraging admissions). However, deaths in aged care homes were 270 times higher in the UK than in Australia as on 7 May 2020 (despite UK having a population only 2.5 times larger than Australia). The lower fatality rate in Australia may have been due to the earlier lockdown strategy when the total daily cases were low in Australia (118) compared to the UK (over 1000), as well as the better community viral testing regime in Australia.Conclusion: In conclusion, the public health policy in Australia aimed towards earlier intervention with earlier national lockdown and more viral testing to prevent new cases. This primary prevention could have resulted in more lives being saved. In contrast, the initial policy in the UK focussed mainly on protecting resources for hospitals, and there was a delay in national lockdown intervention and lower viral testing rate, resulting in more lives lost in the aged care sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Health inequalities in the Great Depression: a case study of Stockton on Tees, North-East England in the 1930s.
- Author
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Langthorne, Michael and Bambra, Clare
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,INFANT mortality ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PERINATAL death ,RECESSIONS ,RESEARCH funding ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Background Parallels have been drawn between the 'Great Depression' of the 1930s and the more recent 'Great Recession' that followed the 2007/8 financial crisis. Austerity was the common policy response by UK governments in both time periods. This article examines health inequalities at a local level in the 1930s, through a historical case study. Methods Local and national historical archives, Medical Officer for Health reports, and secondary sources were examined from 1930 to 1939 to obtain data on inequalities in health (infant mortality rates, stillbirths and neonatal mortality rates, 1935 and crude overall mortality rates, 1936) and ward-level deprivation (over-crowding rates, 1935) in Stockton-on-Tees, North-East England. Results There were high geographical inequalities in overcrowding and health in Stockton-on-Tees in the 1930s. Rates of overall mortality, in particular, were higher in those wards with higher levels of overcrowding. Conclusions There were geographical inequalities in health in the 1930s and the most deprived areas had the worst overall mortality rates. The areas with the worst housing conditions and health outcomes in the 1930s remain so today - health inequality is extant over time across different periods of austerity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Reflections on Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Impact of Housing Modification/Adaptation* for Supporting Older People at Home: A Discussion.
- Author
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Peace, Sheila and Darton, Robin
- Subjects
ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,HOME environment ,HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL support ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SENIOR housing ,HEALTH status indicators ,PUBLIC health ,ETHNOLOGY research ,LABOR supply ,ACCESSIBLE design ,HOME remodeling ,GOVERNMENT policy ,OLDER people with disabilities - Abstract
Home modification or adaptation is an important global issue, especially for older people living with disabilities in ordinary housing of varying ages, and pre-dating concerns about accessibility in design. Comparisons of research from five developed nations identify common themes: variation in integrated service development; public and private financial investment; deferred health costs; workforce expansion and training; and the value of the user perspective. Further discussion identifies the importance of retrofitting alongside new build, and argues for sustainable housing that recognizes population aging but also issues of climate change and the need for more inclusive design of housing for all ages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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