— THE WHITE PAPER ON A NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE: A PYRRHIC VICTORY?

2016 ◽  
pp. 117-140
2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 80-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tara Renton

The relatively new specialty of oral surgery has been disadvantaged in developing an appropriate workforce needed to deliver the aspirations of the 2010 National Health Service (NHS) white paper Equity and Excellence: Liberating the NHS. This article aims to address how we may estimate the oral surgery workforce required to support these developments and identify challenges as well as opportunities.


1998 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 219-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Gillies

This paper looks at the contribution that computers have made to the delivery of the National Health Service through a period of major reform that began in 1986, and is still ongoing. The paper starts with a retrospective analysis of the first generation of NHS Reforms and the role played by computer systems. The major empirical component is a case study looking at the impact of computers on health promotion activities among over 1 million patients in Lancashire. Finally, the paper looks forward to the latest NHS reforms, as outlined in the 1997 White Paper The New DHS (Department of Health, 1997, HMSO, London) and outlines the information implications and a strategic framework to deliver changes required if the reforms are to succeed.


1994 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 489-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen J. Bailey ◽  
Allan Bruce

ABSTRACTThe article emphasises the urgent need for a reconsideration of potential sources of income for the National Health Service which could supplement rather than replace those from general taxation. They include local taxation, earmarked taxes, patient charges (hotel, prescription and other charges for non-clinical items), a lottery, income generation, charitable donations and patient ‘opting out’ of the NHS with private insurance. Analysis is set within the position statement provided by the 1989 White PaperWorking for Patientsand within a more general analytical framework paying attention to equity, accountability, value for money, management incentives and other criteria.Each funding method is considered in terms of its consistency with the criteria of both the analytical framework and the White Paper. The differences between some of the alternative sources are found to be more apparent than real. Rather than providing a panacea for the perceived funding and rationing problems of the NHS, the danger is that new supplementary sources of finance may simply replace one set of problems with another. The new set may pose even more intractable problems and involve considerable short to medium term disruption of NHS finances. The inescapable fact is that decisions about the levels and quality of public service provision and their financing are ultimately matters of democratic accountability, decisions which cannot and should not be sidestepped by the convenience of income sources.


2020 ◽  
pp. 231-266

The remaining diary extracts and correspondence, thematically arranged, with extensive footnotes identifying newspaper coverage of Woolton’s policies and actions on moving to set up and manage the new Ministry of Reconstruction. Woolton ceased keeping his Diary on moving to Reconstruction, but in the few diary entries he made covering the period of transition, his entries reveal his emotions on leaving the Ministry of Food and his opinion of his successor, as well as some indication of the reactions of Ministry staff in London and Colwyn Bay on his departure. Also briefly covered is the initial sense of challenge in establishing the new Ministry. These entries and his correspondence reveal Woolton’s thinking about the role of the new Ministry, and his own one as Minister. What is also revealed is his consciousness of the importance of the Ministry and the Minister acting as a non-party forum for the discussion of post-war reconstruction. His relations with Churchill and Attlee, and his continuing (if low key) engagement with the public are also revealed. The chapter reveals the evolution of the key cross-party white papers outlining plans for post-war reconstruction, including the wartime white paper on a future National Health service.


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