ABSTRACT

Health and Exclusion is a pioneering examination of those policies and practices of exclusion currently experienced by health 'customers' in the UK.
Chapters document examples of exclusion in a number of controversial areas, including:
*the impact of poverty on the health of children
*exclusion in maternity care
*exclusion of those with mental health problems
*exclusion of the elderly in health care
*the silenced voice of the patient
*barriers to recruitment and advancement within the health professions.
The authors challenge whether New Labour policies sufficiently address the inequalities in health experienced by some sectors of society. Moreover they suggest that health professionals at times actively contribute to exclusion and suggest strategies and practices to combat marginalisation and resist exclusion.

chapter |19 pages

Poor health, poor health care

The experiences of low-income households with children

chapter |17 pages

Whose business?

Social welfare and managerial calculation

chapter |16 pages

The health of which nation?

Health, social regulation and the new consensus

chapter |27 pages

Exclusion in maternity care

Midwives and mothers

chapter |19 pages

Social exclusion and madness

The complicity of psychiatric medicine and nursing

chapter |14 pages

‘You can go home today, Mrs Jones'

Surgeons' and patients' negotiations over discharge

chapter |22 pages

Empowerment and health

A community development approach to health promotion

chapter |21 pages

Older people and health services

The challenge of empowerment

chapter |22 pages

Informational health networks

Health care organisation in the information age