Choice and competition have been phased into many public health systems with the aim of achieving various and potentially exclusive goals such as improving efficiency, quality and responsiveness to users’ needs. Yet their use to promote equity of access as evidenced recently in the British National Health Service (the NHS) is unprecedented. Giving users the power of exit over unresponsive providers is meant to address the failures of previous policies. This paper shows that there is a potential conflict between choice and equity, in terms of both the values and the outcomes each policy is likely to produce. Using a multidisciplinary and multidimensional framework, drawn from Bourdieusian sociology, feminist theory and economics, the study h...
Successive governments of the UK have strongly supported two policies: an NHS free at the point of d...
The equity debate within the British National Health ServiceThis paper begins by identifying the pri...
Background: market reforms in England have been identified as making a clear distinction between Eng...
Policy-makers are increasingly advocating market-based reforms to increase choices for service users...
Recently, commentators close to and within the UK government have claimed that patient choice can in...
Extending choice in health care is currently popular among English, and other, politicians. Those pr...
Patient and user choice are at the forefront of the debate on the future direction ...
This article aims to explore the concept of choice in public service policy in England, illustrated ...
Policy discourse shaped by neoliberal ideology, with its emphasis on marketisation and competition, ...
Caroline Lucas, Green Party MP for Brighton Pavilion, and her co-accused have been found not guilty ...
Extensions of choice over public services typically aim to generate increases in competition between...
This paper examines health policy documents from the period in which the NHS was planned through to ...
Choice and competition policies in public services are popular reform strategies in many European co...
Choice in public services is controversial. We exploit a reform in the English National Health Servi...
Background Providing choice in health care is part of an ongoing policy initiative. Aim To explore h...
Successive governments of the UK have strongly supported two policies: an NHS free at the point of d...
The equity debate within the British National Health ServiceThis paper begins by identifying the pri...
Background: market reforms in England have been identified as making a clear distinction between Eng...
Policy-makers are increasingly advocating market-based reforms to increase choices for service users...
Recently, commentators close to and within the UK government have claimed that patient choice can in...
Extending choice in health care is currently popular among English, and other, politicians. Those pr...
Patient and user choice are at the forefront of the debate on the future direction ...
This article aims to explore the concept of choice in public service policy in England, illustrated ...
Policy discourse shaped by neoliberal ideology, with its emphasis on marketisation and competition, ...
Caroline Lucas, Green Party MP for Brighton Pavilion, and her co-accused have been found not guilty ...
Extensions of choice over public services typically aim to generate increases in competition between...
This paper examines health policy documents from the period in which the NHS was planned through to ...
Choice and competition policies in public services are popular reform strategies in many European co...
Choice in public services is controversial. We exploit a reform in the English National Health Servi...
Background Providing choice in health care is part of an ongoing policy initiative. Aim To explore h...
Successive governments of the UK have strongly supported two policies: an NHS free at the point of d...
The equity debate within the British National Health ServiceThis paper begins by identifying the pri...
Background: market reforms in England have been identified as making a clear distinction between Eng...