The funding of hospitals in interwar Britain was transformed by the development of a range of schemes designed to raise money from patients in return for more or less assured access to treatment. Drawing on the nineteenth century traditions of mutual benefit societies and thrift agencies as well as the culture of trade unions, cooperative societies and friendly societies, they brought together small contributions to pool risk and costs for the workers. However, despite important recent research which has gone some way to open up the operation of these schemes to greater scrutiny and understanding, their social, cultural and political make up has received little attention and we know very little about who joined, how the schemes operated on ...
By the 1890s Victorians assumed that London's hospitals were facing an endemic financial crisis whic...
This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the pattern of hospital utilization (rather than pro...
Victorian commentators believed that London's hospitals were the greatest achievement of voluntarism...
This article considers the discussion and rejection of a social insurance model of funding for the B...
Mutualism and health care presents the first comprehensive account of a major innovation in hospital...
In the debates over the politics of National Health Service foundation, there has been little inves...
This thesis focuses on the city of Bristol to examine the British voluntary hospital system in its f...
Summary. In the debates over the politics of National Health Service foundation, there has been litt...
This thesis examines local authority health policy in Sheffield from 1918 to 1948. Sheffield was th...
Drawing on hospital reports, committee minutes and the local press, this article examines the changi...
This article examines the provision of voluntary hospital facilities for injured workers in the mini...
This article re–evaluates the gravity of the financial problems facing British voluntary hospitals i...
dThe article traces the post-war history of the British hospital contributory schemes, which had dev...
Many hospital histories have been written whose authors have usually made exaggerated claims about t...
"There were only three decades in British history when it was the norm for patients to pay the hospi...
By the 1890s Victorians assumed that London's hospitals were facing an endemic financial crisis whic...
This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the pattern of hospital utilization (rather than pro...
Victorian commentators believed that London's hospitals were the greatest achievement of voluntarism...
This article considers the discussion and rejection of a social insurance model of funding for the B...
Mutualism and health care presents the first comprehensive account of a major innovation in hospital...
In the debates over the politics of National Health Service foundation, there has been little inves...
This thesis focuses on the city of Bristol to examine the British voluntary hospital system in its f...
Summary. In the debates over the politics of National Health Service foundation, there has been litt...
This thesis examines local authority health policy in Sheffield from 1918 to 1948. Sheffield was th...
Drawing on hospital reports, committee minutes and the local press, this article examines the changi...
This article examines the provision of voluntary hospital facilities for injured workers in the mini...
This article re–evaluates the gravity of the financial problems facing British voluntary hospitals i...
dThe article traces the post-war history of the British hospital contributory schemes, which had dev...
Many hospital histories have been written whose authors have usually made exaggerated claims about t...
"There were only three decades in British history when it was the norm for patients to pay the hospi...
By the 1890s Victorians assumed that London's hospitals were facing an endemic financial crisis whic...
This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the pattern of hospital utilization (rather than pro...
Victorian commentators believed that London's hospitals were the greatest achievement of voluntarism...