In recent years it has been noted that boundaries between public and private providers of many types of welfare have become blurred. This paper uses three dimensions of publicness to analyse this blurring of boundaries in relation to providers of healthcare in England. The authors find that, although most care is still funded and provided by the state, there are significant additional factors in respect of ownership and social control which indicate that many English healthcare providers are better understood as hybrids. Furthermore, the authors raise concerns about the possible deleterious effects of diminishing aspects of publicness on English healthcare. The most important of these is a decrease in accountabilit
To assess the impact of provider diversity on quality and innovation in the English NHS bymapping th...
Many countries use state-owned, for-profit, and third-sector organizations to provide public service...
Patient and public involvement (PPI) is now firmly embedded in the policies of the Department of Hea...
In recent years it has been noted that boundaries between public and private providers of many types...
In England recent health reforms have resulted in a shift of emphasis from targets to outcomes, and ...
In 2010 the Conservative led Coalition government promptly set about reform of the English NHS. Oppo...
Health policies increasingly support private businesses to take an active role in the organisation a...
This chapter focuses on the introduction and implementation of the Health and Social Care Act (2012)...
This paper studies patient choice of provider following government reforms in the 2000s, which allo...
Public service reforms increasingly blur the boundaries between public and private sectors, involvin...
Any attempt to distinguish between public and private spheres as spaces of care gives rise to immedi...
This paper studies the interplay between public and private health care in a National Health Service...
Purpose Neo-liberal “reform” has in many countries shifted services across the boundary between the...
This chapter focuses on changing local structures of patient and public involvement (PPI) in the Eng...
A wide ranging set of reforms is being introduced into the English National Health Service (NHS). Th...
To assess the impact of provider diversity on quality and innovation in the English NHS bymapping th...
Many countries use state-owned, for-profit, and third-sector organizations to provide public service...
Patient and public involvement (PPI) is now firmly embedded in the policies of the Department of Hea...
In recent years it has been noted that boundaries between public and private providers of many types...
In England recent health reforms have resulted in a shift of emphasis from targets to outcomes, and ...
In 2010 the Conservative led Coalition government promptly set about reform of the English NHS. Oppo...
Health policies increasingly support private businesses to take an active role in the organisation a...
This chapter focuses on the introduction and implementation of the Health and Social Care Act (2012)...
This paper studies patient choice of provider following government reforms in the 2000s, which allo...
Public service reforms increasingly blur the boundaries between public and private sectors, involvin...
Any attempt to distinguish between public and private spheres as spaces of care gives rise to immedi...
This paper studies the interplay between public and private health care in a National Health Service...
Purpose Neo-liberal “reform” has in many countries shifted services across the boundary between the...
This chapter focuses on changing local structures of patient and public involvement (PPI) in the Eng...
A wide ranging set of reforms is being introduced into the English National Health Service (NHS). Th...
To assess the impact of provider diversity on quality and innovation in the English NHS bymapping th...
Many countries use state-owned, for-profit, and third-sector organizations to provide public service...
Patient and public involvement (PPI) is now firmly embedded in the policies of the Department of Hea...