Evaluating the National Health Service (State of Health)

Evaluating the National Health Service (State of Health)

by Martin A . Powell (Author)

Synopsis

Like the NHS, this book offers excellent value-for-money. It is efficient in its use of resources, equitable in producing a lucid and informative outcome. It will be an indispensable reference work for both practicing policy analysts and students, - Professor Julian Le Grand, London School of Economics . This is a fresh and innovative study of the National Health Service. Drawing on his unusually wide research experience relating to British health care from the 1930s to the present, Martin Powell avoids the well-worn path by concentrating on the problematic area of evaluation. He demonstrates that balanced assessment of the NHS has been impeded by political correctness and rhetoric to such an extent that it is extremely difficult to arrive at objectively firm conclusions about the record of health service past or present. In this ambitious, astute and indeed audacious study, Dr Powell penetrates the fog of obfuscation, and outlines a conceptual approach likely to yield more certain conclusions in the future. - Charles Webster, official historian of the NHS. To what extent has the National Health Service achieved its objectives? How well does the performance of the National Health Service compare with health care before the NHS and with other countries? What impact have the recent reforms had on the National Health Service? This book provides the first single, comprehensive evaluation of the National Health Service. It draws on original research to examine health care before the NHS, and health care in other countries in order to locate the service in its wider context. In eight, well-structured chapters it traces the changing policies of the NHS, analyzes its successes and failures, examines the current situation in the service, and attempts to predict its future direction. Evaluating the National Health Service is intended for textbook use by students of social policy, health policy and politics. It is also directly relevant to a wide variety of health care professionals both in training and in practice.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 219
Publisher: Open University Press
Published: 01 May 1997

ISBN 10: 033519530X
ISBN 13: 9780335195305

Media Reviews
Powell provides a useful and comprehensive survey which certainly meets the needs of its target audience of students of social policy, health policy and politics. - Medical Sociology News Like the NHS, this book offers excellent value-for-money. It is efficient in its use of resources, equitable in producing a lucid and informative outcome. It will be an indispensable referencework for both practising policy analysts and students, - Professor Julian Le Grand, London School of Economics This is a fresh and innovative study of the National Health Service. Drawing on his unusually wide research experience relating to British health care from the 1930s to the present, Martin Powell avoids the well-worn path by concentrating on the problematic area of evaluation. He demonstrates that balanced assessment of the NHS has been impeded by political correctness and rhetoric to such an extent that it is extremely difficult to arrive at objectively firm conclusions about the record of health service past or present. In this ambitious, astute and indeed audacious study, Dr Powell penetrates the fog of obfuscation, and outlines a conceptual approach likely to yield more certain conclusions in the future. - Charles Webster, official historian of the NHS
Author Bio
Martin Powell has degrees in geography from the Universities of Reading and London. After lecturing posts at the Universities of Glamorgan and Hertfordshire, he is now a Senior Research Fellow at the School of Social and Historical Studies, University of Portsmouth. He has been researching health policy for over ten years, and has published more than twenty articles.