Despite the rise of patient and public involvement, evidence from the junior doctor’s strike suggests that little has changed in terms of the power of Westminster and the lack of public accountability for decisions that lie at the heart of how the NHS is organised. Here, Jonathan Tritter and Mio Fredriksson discuss the tensions between representative and participatory democracy in NHS decision-making, and argue that Jeremy Hunt is pursuing a centralised vision of the NHS rather than responding to consumer-driven demand
Since the 1990’s successive government policies have fostered the way for collaborative working in h...
The government’s proposals for yet another wholesale restructuring of the NHS have predominantly bee...
In the wake of multiple healthcare scandals involving the ill-treatment of patients, the Coalition g...
Unlike many other public services, the NHS is not subject to local democratic control. In this post ...
The English National Health Service (NHS) has suffered from a democratic deficit since its inception...
The NHS never seems to be out of the news. Currently, the sense of a crumbling, deteriorating system...
Unlike many other public services, the NHS is not subject to local democratic control. In this post ...
The NHS has an annual budget which exceeds that of some democratic countries, but its oversight and ...
Public service user engagement is all the rage across the UK’s three main political parties, with ag...
Major changes to the structure of the NHS were announced by the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalit...
Today marks the day of England’s first ever all-out strike in the NHS. The National Health Service i...
The latest episode of the four year battle between the Government and the British Medical Associatio...
Since the formation of the NHS, all UK citizens have been entitled to access a universal health serv...
One of the Coalition’s central (and most controversial) policies are its proposed reforms of the NHS...
Mark Hellowell argues that the government’s own rhetoric during late 2010 and 2011 may be responsibl...
Since the 1990’s successive government policies have fostered the way for collaborative working in h...
The government’s proposals for yet another wholesale restructuring of the NHS have predominantly bee...
In the wake of multiple healthcare scandals involving the ill-treatment of patients, the Coalition g...
Unlike many other public services, the NHS is not subject to local democratic control. In this post ...
The English National Health Service (NHS) has suffered from a democratic deficit since its inception...
The NHS never seems to be out of the news. Currently, the sense of a crumbling, deteriorating system...
Unlike many other public services, the NHS is not subject to local democratic control. In this post ...
The NHS has an annual budget which exceeds that of some democratic countries, but its oversight and ...
Public service user engagement is all the rage across the UK’s three main political parties, with ag...
Major changes to the structure of the NHS were announced by the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalit...
Today marks the day of England’s first ever all-out strike in the NHS. The National Health Service i...
The latest episode of the four year battle between the Government and the British Medical Associatio...
Since the formation of the NHS, all UK citizens have been entitled to access a universal health serv...
One of the Coalition’s central (and most controversial) policies are its proposed reforms of the NHS...
Mark Hellowell argues that the government’s own rhetoric during late 2010 and 2011 may be responsibl...
Since the 1990’s successive government policies have fostered the way for collaborative working in h...
The government’s proposals for yet another wholesale restructuring of the NHS have predominantly bee...
In the wake of multiple healthcare scandals involving the ill-treatment of patients, the Coalition g...