ABSTRACT

Following the Governments health reforms in 1991 rationing has been put firmly on the agenda. This book identifies and clarifies the numerous political and ethical issues surrounding rationing in healthcare. Drawing upon international examples it offers a critical overview of the approaches to rationing and makes practical proposals for its management.
Desperately Seeking Solutions challenges the assumption that all health services are inherently subject to rationing as demand invariably outstrips supply and examines this within a comparative framework. The author critically evaluates the extent to which rationing has always existed and should exist within the NHS, although until recently it operated on an implicit rather than explicit basis and was bound up with clinical judgements rather than purely financial considerations. The author questions whether calls for explicit rationing are actually desirable and potentially feasible.

part One|39 pages

The Dilemma of Rationing Health Care: Origins and Definitions

chapter Chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|24 pages

Defining terms

part Two|53 pages

The Health-Care Rationing Debate in the UK: a Review

chapter Chapter 3|16 pages

The management agenda

chapter Chapter 4|35 pages

Rationing: a national or local matter?

part Three|53 pages

Health-Care Rationing: Lesson-learning and Future Prospects

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

International approaches to rationing health care

chapter Chapter 6|30 pages

Issues and prospects